Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Vietnam’s fishermen on front line in China clash [-The Viet gov't has been pushing its fishermen to venture farther offshore, that's why they are fishing inside Cambodia territories!!!]

The Vietnamese government, like others around the region, has been pushing its fishermen to venture farther offshore, to ease the pressure on heavily overexploited coastal fisheries and to back up their territorial claims.

June 20 2011
By Ben Bland in Ly Son island
Financial Times

When Tran Hien, the 31-year-old captain of a Vietnamese fishing boat, saw a large Chinese vessel while sailing near the disputed Paracel Islands, he knew exactly what was about to happen.

Officers from China’s fisheries agency boarded his 15m boat and, with neither party able to understand the other’s language, confiscated nearly $3,000 worth of fish and equipment.

“We were in Vietnamese waters and had every right to be there but there was no way we could outrun them,” says Mr Hien of the incident, which took place at about 9am on June 14.

Mr Hien is one of dozens of Vietnamese fishermen who have had their equipment, fish or even boats seized by Chinese patrol vessels this year, as tension between the two neighbours over contested waters in the South China Sea boiled over.


Hanoi claims that some of its fishermen have been shot at by Chinese patrols and that this harassment of its fishermen is in violation of international law. Beijing maintains that it apprehends only those who have violated its sovereignty or lack the correct licence.

ALL AT SEA

From the Malvinas to Macedonia, disagreements over geographical names can be the symptom or cause of wider disputes, writes Ben Bland in Ly Son island.

The South China Sea is no different. The mere mention of the internationally accepted name for this body of water can rouse the anger of diplomats in Vietnam and the Philippines.

Hanoi prefers “East Sea” while Manila calls it the “West Philippine Sea”. Ironically, China does not use the term “South China Sea” domestically, dubbing it merely the “South Sea”. Further muddying the waters, more than 40,000 people have signed an online petition to change the name to the “South-east Asia Sea”.

“People may ask ‘what’s in a name?’ ” a spokesman for the Philippine armed forces was quoted as saying recently. But, he explained, “when people keep saying that it is the South China Sea, there is a subliminal message” that it belongs to China.

This is one of several long-running disputes over fishing grounds in Asia, where freewheeling fishermen with large investments to recoup do not always respect the “exclusive economic zones” laid down in international maritime law.

Relations between China and Vietnam, which purport to be “good friends, good neighbours, good comrades”, have sunk to their lowest level in recent times following allegations by Vietnam that China has been sabotaging its oil exploration vessels, sparking rare anti-China protests on the streets of Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City.

The disputes in the South China Sea – parts or all of which are also claimed by Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Taiwan – may be driven by a variety of factors, including a general disagreement over boundaries and the need to maintain access to commercial sea lanes. Some also believe that the contested Spratly and Paracel islands sit on vast oil and gas reserves, a claim yet unproven.

But one big source of tension is the area’s status as one of the world’s best sources of another key natural resource: fish.

About 10 per cent of the global supply of fish comes from these waters, according to the UN Environment Programme, while as many as 1.9m boats regularly fish there, according to Simon Funge-Smith, senior fishery officer at the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation in Bangkok.

While China is the world’s biggest consumer and exporter of fish, the Vietnamese economy is far more reliant on the industry as a source of revenue. Seafood was the country’s second biggest foreign exchange earner last year, accounting for 7 per cent of its $71.6bn of exports.

Despite the risks posed by Chinese patrols – not to mention the challenge of sailing the often stormy seas – Mr Hien and his fellow captain, Le Tan, who had his $20,000 boat seized in 2006, have good reasons to keep fishing.

They can make decent profits when they bring in good catches of popular export fish such as tuna, grouper and snapper, and they lack options in an area where agriculture is already at full capacity.

There is another crucial factor. The Vietnamese government, like others around the region, has been pushing its fishermen to venture farther offshore, to ease the pressure on heavily overexploited coastal fisheries and to back up their territorial claims.

If Vietnam acquiesces in the face of Chinese claims, it will be “considered as implicitly recognising China’s sovereignty in the disputed areas”, Nguyen Dang Thang, a Vietnamese expert in maritime law, wrote in a recent paper for Singapore’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.

Vietnam, like other countries, has provided fuel subsidies to offshore vessels, as well as soft loans and other financial support to boat owners who upgrade their engines. The agriculture ministry is also working on a programme to equip 3,000 of Vietnam’s offshore fishing boats with a satellite positioning system.

Some analysts have even suggested that the government might be providing direct financial incentives to fishermen who venture into the areas where they are most at risk of being detained by Chinese patrols. Fishermen and local government officials deny that claim.

Mr Hien says: “Our life is very difficult and we wish we had more help from the government.”

“China will keep catching fishermen until it runs out of money, which is never.”

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

*The vietnamese fishing Boats are always came in to Khmer sea for fishing.But the KHMER Navy forces are BLINDED.So if that island belong to Vietnam or China....KOH TRAL will belong to KHMER country 100%.
KOH TRAL 2012-13

Anonymous said...

These Viet thieves need to learn to stop stealing the Chinese fish and the Cambodian fish. These Viet thieves even come to fish near Cambodia's territorial sea. In addition, they already took control of various major Cambodia's islands and ancestral territorial sea waters. These Viet thieves are simply too much. Thanks god that while the Cambodians are standing hopelessly watching these Viet thieve plundering and exploiting the Cambodian fish, the Chinese are able to SAY NO to them. The Viet pests are only fearful of the Chinese because the Chinese always mean what they are going to do while the Cambodians can only protest to the rude mocking Vietnamese who always show their skinny flat asses to every Cambodian diplomatic complaint.

Anonymous said...

The Phillippines is the closest country to the Spatly Islands. So this country should own trhese islands.

Anonymous said...

VietNam Vietcong has no credibility whatsoever in this case. Look at what VietNam is doing to other smaller neighbor countries.

VietNam Vietcong is the aggressor and terrorist in S.E.A

Anonymous said...

6:53AM,
Khmer navy is not blind.They are chicken out.You know ,khmer armed Force is best to fight against their own people.

Anonymous said...

6:53 AM You mean KOH TRAL 2099-2100!

2099 lease expired
2100 lease extension

Anonymous said...

i think china as a big in asia has the rights to claim this sea territories. afterall, the viet/youn came to cambodia's sea territory and stole koh tral from cambodia! territorially, the koh tral island actually belongs to cambodia, but we know the french signed it off to vietnam, and today is control by vietnam. however, it's still a khmer island, despite its administration is fall under viet/youn gov't. the same is applied to china! if viet/youn can take khmer koh tral island, then by all mean, china has the rights to claim all of this areas shown on the map above, really! why is viet/youn bitching or whining now? khmer people always know about koh tral island and that it belongs to cambodia, not to viet/youn, you know! i hope one day, cambodia will get our beloved koh tral island back from vietnam, you know!

Anonymous said...

Go China go, kill them all. The Worlds' doesn't need them.

Đại Việt said...

poor all of you :))

Anonymous said...

THAT IS WHY, THE CAMBODIAN GOVERNMENT AND THE CHINESE GOVERNMENT,ARE THE ONLY ONE POLICY.DON'T WORRY ALL THE CAMBODIAN PEOPLES,THE CHINESE LEADERS WILL SEND MORE VESSEL SHIPS TO THE KHMER'S ARMY TO BACK UP THE CHINESE IF THE VIET-CONG WANT TO BITE CHINESE PEOPLES.WE WILL SEND THEM DOWN TO THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA TO FEED THE SHARKS,JUST LIKE WE USED TO SEND THEM DOWN TO THE BOTTOM OF THE(NEAK LEOUNG'S MEKONG RIVER).THE VIET AND THE SIAM,IS OUR ENEMIES HISTORY!,I NEVER EVER FORGET THAT MY CHILDREN 'S BEEN TOLD AND WE WILL PASS DOWN THROUGH OUR GREAT GREAT GREAT GRAND CHILDREN!.TAKING CARE YOUR OWN FLAT SKINNY ASS,THE VIET-CONG DOG EATERS!.

Anonymous said...

Cambodia should give more land to Vietnam for saving them from the genocidal Khmer Rouge.

Anonymous said...

To ah idiots 12:06PM you needs to learn more Khmer history morons. If you wanted to give land to ah Dogs eaters just give yourself to to them the rest of Khmer won't stupid head using your fucking dumb brain asshole.

Anonymous said...

kkf aus

"If Vietnam wishes to create a war in the South China Sea, China will resolutely keep them company," the Global Times said. "China has the absolute might to crush the naval fleets sent from Vietnam. China will show no mercy to its rival due to 'global impact' concerns."

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/43474752/ns/world_news-asia_pacific

Anonymous said...

Vietnamese leaders do not or ever allow Vietnamese people to learn the real history, because they are afraid of the truth. But some Vietnamese scholars knew the truth from learning through Dutch and French archives.
Vietnamese have no business in those islands, those islands belong to China including Sai-Con or Saigon now Ho Chi Minh City.
China can take Vietnam in a second and the west like the US cannot stop it. Why? The US, Russia are broke.
How long will the Vietnamese run from China? Sooner or later they will have to surrender. And when the Islam world want Champa to be reborn, they have to make a deal with China.

Chinese call the Vietnamese "The Yue", the people from South China.

Anonymous said...

There are many reasons to hate hate Yuon.

Anonymous said...

who cares about vietcong, really! vietcong stole khmer koh tral island, how do you think khmer people feel, asshole!