Bangkok Post

Authoritie­s sink foreign boats to deter illegal fishing

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JAKARTA: Indonesia has sunk 41 foreign boats across the archipelag­o, reports said on Thursday, as part of an ongoing push to stop illegal fishing in its waters.

Authoritie­s sank the vessels in public displays at several sites on Wednesday, local media reported.

The boats included one from China and others from Vietnam, Thailand and the Philippine­s.

Some of the boats were blown up with dynamite and pictures showed the vessels engulfed in flames as they went down.

Indonesia has defended its policy of seizing and destroying illegal fishing boats, a hardline approach that risks attracting regional anger.

“Without the continued fight against illegal fishing, we won’t be able to improve the welfare of our fishermen,” Fisheries Minister Susi Pudjiastut­i told The Jakarta Post newspaper.

The Chinese vessel sunk was reportedly a large ship detained in 2009 for fishing in Indonesia’s exclusive economic zone in the South China Sea.

President Joko Widodo has taken a hardline approach to illegal fishing since taking office in October, vowing to stamp out a practice he says costs Southeast Asia’s biggest economy billions of US dollars in lost revenues every year.

Indonesia had already destroyed boats from Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, Papua New Guinea and the Philippine­s in highly publicised displays.

Authoritie­s also say foreigners illegally fishing in Indonesia are partly responsibl­e for massive damage to the environmen­t because of the widespread use of explosives and cyanide.

Mr Widodo hopes that increased revenues from fishing can help boost economic growth, which has sunk to a fiveyear low.

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