Toronto Star

CHALLENGIN­G CHINA

This politician is not one to shy away from a fish fight,

- HANNAH BEECH AND MUKTITA SUHARTONO

PANGANDARA­N, INDONESIA— Susi Pudjiastut­i was scooping up lunch with one hand, using her thumb and two fingers to extricate bones from a chunk of fish. With the other hand, she simulated grinding a stiletto heel into the ground.

“This is what I can do if the Chinese try to play tricks on me,” said Pudjiastut­i, the maritime affairs and fisheries minister of Indonesia. “I can smile very nicely and then I can use my high heel.”

“Very sharp,” she added, popping the piece of fish into her mouth.

Suffice it to say that Pudjiastut­i is not a convention­al Indonesian woman, much less a convention­al cabinet minister. She chain smokes, although Indonesia’s health minister — one of eight women in the cabinet of President Joko Widodo — has warned her that a public figure should not be seen lighting up.

Pudjiastut­i likes her coffee black and her alcohol only in the form of champagne. “My family thinks I am a little bit of a nut case,” she said.

Perhaps it takes an unconventi­onal type to challenge Beijing, going so far as to seize Chinese fishing boats poaching in Indonesian waters. She has created many enemies along the way, at home as well as abroad, but she says her success can be measured by the improved health of Indonesia’s fishing grounds, and she is not about to back down.

With more than13,000 islands, Indonesia is the world’s largest archipelag­ic nation, yet its maritime sovereignt­y had long been neglected. When she was appointed in 2014, Pudjiastut­i, a seafood and aviation magnate who never finished high school, inherited a ministry that was in danger of being eliminated. But she has transforme­d her portfolio, declaring war on foreign fishing boats that had encroached on territoria­l waters and threatened some of the world’s most biodiverse seas.

Not all of the offenders have been from China. Boats from other Southeast Asian nations stray into Indonesia’s waters as well, costing the country more than a $1 billion a year in lost resources, the United Nations has reported. Pudjiastut­i has not relied on subtlety: under her aegis, hundreds of impounded foreign vessels have been blown up.

But it is Pudjiastut­i’s entangleme­nts with the Chinese that have created the greatest uproar, while also making her an unlikely heroine for those calling for internatio­nal defiance of Beijing’s muscular foreign policy.

Indonesia is not an official claimant to contested territory in the South China Sea, where Beijing is landing bombers on disputed islets. But the nine-dash line that China uses on maps to demarcate the swath of the South China Sea it considers its own neverthele­ss extends into waters that lap up against Indonesian islands. That is where the fish — and Pudjiastut­i — come in. “I’m not the military, I’m not the foreign minister,” she said. “The Chinese cannot really get angry at me because all I’m talking about is fish.”

Another smile, another bite of lunch, this time doused in an incendiary sauce Pudjiastut­i made from part of a 30-kilogram haul of chiles she bought during a recent trip to eastern Indonesia.

In June 2016, an Indonesian warship towed away a Chinese fishing boat that had been caught near the Natunas, Indonesian islands located in the southernmo­st reaches of the South China Sea. An attempt earlier that year to bring in another Chinese boat had been foiled when the Chinese Coast Guard intervened, severing the towing line connecting the impounded vessel to an Indonesian patrol boat.

Both seizures took place in waters that are well within Indonesia’s exclusive economic zone, as defined by internatio­nal maritime law. But the Chinese Foreign Ministry protested and referred to the seas as China’s “traditiona­l fishing grounds.”

Pudjiastut­i was not impressed. “The Indonesian­s sailed all the way to Madagascar in ancient times,” she said.

“Should we claim the entire Indian Ocean as our ‘traditiona­l fishing grounds’?”

Since Pudjiastut­i took over, most of the 10,000 foreign fishing boats that once poached in Indonesian waters have disappeare­d. Fishing stocks more than doubled from 2013 to 2017, according to government statistics.

But earlier this year, Indonesia’s vice-president, Jusuf Kalla, said that enough was enough. Blowing up boats may have made Pudjiastut­i the most beloved Indonesian cabinet minister, but the shock tactics were scaring off foreign investors. The Indonesian Chamber of Commerce echoed his complaint.

Even Indonesia’s 2.4-million-strong fishing community was up in arms, protesting Pudjiastut­i’s efforts to halt popular but environmen­tally destructiv­e practices like deep trawling and dynamite fishing.

The fisheries minister is unsympathe­tic. “When I started off in the seafood business, the fish were this big,” she said, widening her arms. “Then everything was small. The fish were gone, overfished, and the government didn’t care.”

Supporters have raised Pudjiastut­i’s name as a possible vice-presidenti­al running mate to Widodo, who is up for re-election next year, despite aconstitut­ional clause that limits the nation’s top two posts to candidates with a high school degree. Pudjiastut­i demurred when asked to comment on the vice-presidenti­al rumours.

Whenever she can, she returns to the sea. Earlier this year, Pudjiastut­i and one of her housekeepe­rs, Nurmadia Heremba, travelled to Pangandara­n, the mangrove-fronted town where she grew up. It was a holiday weekend, and she decompress­ed by steering a paddleboar­d out to sea.

The current was strong but after 90 minutes of hard rowing Pudjiastut­i relaxed on her paddleboar­d with a smoke and a hot drink. The setting sun glowed crimson over the Indian Ocean. “Screw Jakarta,” Pudjiastut­i said. “I am happy when I am out at sea.”

“The Indonesian­s sailed all the way to Madagascar in ancient times. Should we claim the entire Indian Ocean as our ‘traditiona­l fishing grounds’?” SUSI PUDJIASTUT­I MARITIME AFFAIRS AND FISHERIES MINISTER OF INDONESIA

 ??  ??
 ?? KEMAL JUFRI PHOTOS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Susi Pudjiastut­i, a paddleboar­der and Indonesia’s maritime affairs and fisheries minister, has made a name for herself by seizing illegal fishing boats and blowing them up.
KEMAL JUFRI PHOTOS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Susi Pudjiastut­i, a paddleboar­der and Indonesia’s maritime affairs and fisheries minister, has made a name for herself by seizing illegal fishing boats and blowing them up.
 ??  ?? Pudjiastut­i, centre, at Indonesian Fashion Week in Jakarta in March.
Pudjiastut­i, centre, at Indonesian Fashion Week in Jakarta in March.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada