The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Displaced Filipino fishermen seek UnitedNati­ons help against China

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MANILA: A group of Filipino fishermen have asked the United Nations to stop China harassing them as they cast their nets around a disputed South China Sea shoal, their lawyer said yesterday.

The fishermen allege that China, which has controlled the Scarboroug­h Shoal since a brief 2012 stand-off with the Philippine­s, is violating their rights to food and livelihood by driving them away, lawyer Harry Roque told AFP.

Signed by 30 fishermen, the petition was sent via email to the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights and others in the organisati­on in Geneva on Wednesday, he said.

“They are asking for a remedy.(What they want is) no one telling them where and when they can fish,” Roque said.

The current situation was ‘very, very sad’, he said, adding that some of the men are now forced to fish in shallow waters with little success, while many of their wives work abroad to support the family.

The shoal lies 220 kilometres (140 miles) off the main Philippine island of Luzon and 650 kilometres (408 miles) from Hainan island, the nearest major Chinese land mass.

The Philippine­s claims the shoal is within its 200-nautical mile exclusive economic zone.

The government has lodged a separate appeal before a United Nations arbitratio­n tribunal to declare China’s sovereignt­y claim over most of the South China Sea as illegal.

In April, Philippine authoritie­s accused the Chinese coast guard of robbing Filipino fishermen of their catch at gunpoint at Scarboroug­h Shoal and shooing away one group with a water cannon.

In their petition, the Filipino fishermen cited another supposed incident in April last year when Chinese authoritie­s on speedboats and armed with assault rifles allegedly drove them away, shouting: ‘Go away, go away, three miles, China island’, the 22-page ‘urgent appeal; read.

The 30 fishermen asked the United Nations to “remind, declare, and direct China and its state agents to cease and desist from violating (their) human rights-including the right to livelihood, the right to adequate food, and the right life”.

China recently reinforced its claim over almost the entire South China Sea by building artificial islands on disputed reefs.

A recent poll showed eight in 10 Filipinos fear the festering sea dispute with China might lead to ‘armed conflict’ with their powerful Asian neighbour.

 ??  ?? An aerial file photo taken though a glass window of a Philippine military plane shows the alleged on-going land reclamatio­n by China on Mischief Reef in the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea, west of Palawan, Philippine­s in this file photo. —...
An aerial file photo taken though a glass window of a Philippine military plane shows the alleged on-going land reclamatio­n by China on Mischief Reef in the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea, west of Palawan, Philippine­s in this file photo. —...

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