The Guardian (USA)

Chinese fishing flotilla nears Peruvian waters, prompting US-Beijing spat

- Dan Collyns in Lima

A huge fishing armada of Chinese vessels has moved south from the Galápagos Islands towards Peru’s territoria­l waters, dragging the South American country into a diplomatic Twitter row between Washington and Beijing.

Earlier this week, the US embassy in Lima tweeted a warning in Spanish that “more than 300 Chinese-flagged vessels with a record of changing boat names and deactivati­ng GPS trackers” were heading towards Peru.

“Overfishin­g can cause huge ecological and economic damage. Peru cannot afford such a loss,” it said.

China’s embassy retorted with its own tweet, insisting that its deep-water fishing fleet respected internatio­nal law and “strictly obeyed Peruvian laws and limited itself to operating in the high seas”.

“We hope the Peruvian public won’t be fooled by false informatio­n,” it said.

The online spat was the latest sign of growing tensions over the presence of giant flotilla, which was first detected off the Galápagos archipelag­o in July, stirring outrage in Ecuador and raising global concern about the practices of the world’s largest deep-water fishing fleet.

Stuck in the middle of a geopolitic­al row between its two biggest economic partners and allies, Peru’s foreign ministry expressed “unease” at the US embassy tweet’s “inconvenie­nt inaccuracy” because the Chinese fleet was “demonstrab­ly” outside the country’s territoria­l waters.

In a Twitter thread, the ministry urged the two countries to resolve their difference­s through dialogue, but also added that Peru would “defend its sovereignt­y and natural resources, and equally firmly prevent, discourage and eradicate illegal fishing”.

A Peruvian navy patrol boat is policing the limits of the country’s territoria­l waters, which are 200 nautical miles from the coast, the defence ministry said in a statement. Earlier this week, a reconnaiss­ance flight found Chinese

vessels had not breached the limits, it added.

During just one month, the vast fleet logged an astonishin­g 73,000 hours of fishing, pulling up thousands of tonnes of squid and fish as hundreds of boats scoured the sea on the southern limit of the Galápagos Islands’ territoria­l waters, according to data analysis by the marine conservati­on group

Oceana.

 ??  ?? A fish seller in Lima in August. Peru’s foreign ministry expressed its ‘unease’ at the US embassy tweet’s ‘inconvenie­nt inaccuracy’ because the fleet was ‘demonstrab­ly’ outside its waters. Photograph: Rodrigo Abd/AP
A fish seller in Lima in August. Peru’s foreign ministry expressed its ‘unease’ at the US embassy tweet’s ‘inconvenie­nt inaccuracy’ because the fleet was ‘demonstrab­ly’ outside its waters. Photograph: Rodrigo Abd/AP

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