Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH fishermen recount ordeal near shoal

- By Allan Macatuno, Inquirer Central Luzon

MASINLOC, Zambales—Foreign journalist­s on Saturday documented firsthand accounts of Filipino fishermen who operate near the disputed Bajo de Masinloc, also known as the Scarboroug­h or Panatag Shoal, in the West Philippine Sea.

“It felt like we were up against a Chinese warship,” said fisherman Viany Mula, 43, who narrated his experience of aggression by the Chinese Coast Guard patrolling the shoal. He was among the fishermen who were driven away by the water cannons fired by the Chinese in January last year.

Really scared

Mula talked with 15 journalist­s, who are fellows under the Hawaii-based East-West Center’s (EWC) Jefferson fellowship program and are here to study territoria­l disputes.

“We were really scared when they fired water at us. We just wanted to fish in that area,” said Mula, a fishing boat captain who was with a fleet of Filipino fishermen at that time when bad weather forced them to take refuge at the shoal. Suddenly, he said, they were assaulted with water cannons by a Chinese Coast Guard vessel.

Aside from China’s sea patrols there, a Chinese helicopter drove the fishermen away in April 2013, said Macario Forones, 56, owner of several boats that were sprayed with water by the Chinese vessels. The helicopter, he said, chased them up to 16 kilometers.

Forones said his crew had been fishing near the shoal for more than a decade now. The aggression of Chinese near the shoal was first experience­d by local fishermen in 2011, he said.

“The last time I sailed near the shoal was on April 6, 2013. We were again driven away by the Chinese Coast Guard. I have not returned since then,” Forones said.

Harvesting clams, corals

Another fisherman, Peter Manglicmot, 40, said the Chinese Coast Guard personnel had been harvesting giant clams and collecting corals from the waters near the shoal.

Zambales Gov. Hermogenes Ebdane Jr. said some 2,400 fishing families in his province had been experienci­ng the impact of the ongoing dispute at Bajo de Masinloc.

“While our eyes are glued on [the heated exchanges between the Philippine and Chinese government­s], we lose sight of the everyday situation within and along our territoria­l waters,” Ebdane said at a dialogue with the foreign journalist­s.

He said local fishermen had become apprehensi­ve about the territoria­l dispute “affecting not only their means of living, but also the welfare of their respective families.”

Ebdane said he was hoping that the internatio­nal media “would highlight the day-to-day plight of our voiceless fishermen.”

Provides assistance

He said the provincial government has been assisting the fishermen and their families by providing fishing devices such as boat engines, life vests, gill nets and “payaw” (artificial reef).

Masinloc Mayor Desiree Edora said residents were “disturbed socially, culturally and economical­ly” by the presence of the Chinese in the shoal, which is 230 km from Masinloc town.

“We cry for justice for the good of the Filipino community. We need to fight for our sovereignt­y and let the Philippine­s be Philippine­s for all Filipino people,” Edora said.

Fresh insights

One of the foreign journalist­s, Dr. Rungthip Chotnapala­i, news anchor of Bangkok-based Thai Television Channel 3, said the journalist­s’ visit had allowed her to get fresh insights from local fishermen directly affected by the territoria­l disputes.

“We’ve learned so much about the condition of the fishermen. I’ll be reporting about this when I go back to Thailand so our viewers will be aware of this issue,” she told the INQUIRER.

Ann Hartman, EWC Jefferson fellowship program coordinato­r, said the journalist­s were traveling together to study “crucial South China Sea ( West Philippine Sea) issues.”

The 15 delegates represent various news organizati­ons worldwide, said Dr. Gerard Finin, EWC Pacific Islands Developmen­t Program director. They include journalist­s from Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp., Kyodo News, The Times of India, The Washington Post and other print and broadcast news organizati­ons.

‘It felt like we were up against a Chinese warship’

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