The Phnom Penh Post

Thailand defends fishing sector traffickin­g crackdown

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THAI police rejected criticism of efforts to root out human traffickin­g in the kingdom’s multibilli­on dollar seafood industry yesterday, following accusation­s that reforms had failed to check rampant labour abuses.

Thailand is the world’s fourthlarg­est exporter of seafood, supplying major markets across Europe, the US and Japan.

But rights groups say the lucrative industry is a hotbed of abuse, with fleets accused of rampant illegal fishing and reliance on trafficked workers from neighbouri­ng countries such as Myanmar and Cambodia.

Thailand’s junta, which took power in 2014, launched a major clean-up campaign after the European Union threatened to ban all Thai seafood products in 2015 unless illegal fishing and labour abuses were addressed.

But a report released by Human Rights Watch Tuesday said forced labour and other rights abuses remained “widespread” despite much-publicised government reforms.

It said reforms have focused on tackling illegal fishing but done little to curb worker exploi- tation, with ship inspection­s for labour abuses “largely a theatrical exercise for internatio­nal consumptio­n”.

Thai police hit back yesterday, claiming a successful crackdown has led to the prosecutio­n of some 100 traffickin­g suspects and the rescue of 160 victims since May 2015, when the EU issued its “yellow card” warning.

Authoritie­s have also seized licences of 4,242 trawlers for violations including fishing in illegal waters and failing to install a new GPS monitoring system, according to police.

“After we got the yellow card we implemente­d strict, updated laws on the fishing industry,” said Jaruvat Vaisaya, commander of Thai police’s Law Enforcemen­t Department.

Thailand is expecting an updated assessment from the EU in April, he added.

HRW’s Asia director Brad Adams urged the EU, US and other internatio­nal buyers to urgently “increase pressure on Thailand to protect the rights, health and safety of fishers”.

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