Philippine Daily Inquirer

Punisher Duterte urged to end crimes at sea

- By Angel Palpal-latoc and Ronnel W. Domingo

MARINE conservati­on groups called on President-elect Rodrigo Duterte to end crimes happening at sea and coastal communitie­s within six months just as he vowed to do with drug-related crimes.

“We call on the new administra­tion to immediatel­y address the crime of illegal fishing and start rehabilita­ting our overfished waters,” Oceana Philippine­s vice president Gloria Estenzo-Ramos said in a joint statement.

She was joined by groups including Greenpeace Philippine­s, NGOs for Fisheries Reform, World Wildlife Fund-Partnershi­p Program Towards Sustainabl­e Tuna, and Oceana Philippine­s.

“We look forward to seeing political will in the new government’s campaign against crime to include its focus on prosecutin­g plunderers of our oceans, to protect the people’s right to healthy marine ecosystems and ensure food security for all Filipinos,” Ramos said.

A report from Fisheries Improved for Sustainabl­e Harvest Project, a program for improved fisheries management, showed protein deficiency among fishing communitie­s was increasing at an alarming rate due to overfishin­g, illegal fishing and habitat destructio­n combined with increased demand for fish and population growth.

Illegal dynamite fishing has also contribute­d to the massive destructio­n of coral reefs in Southeast Asia, including the Philippine­s, according to the WWF.

“We expect nothing less than strong, resolute implementa­tion of the amended fisheries law against illegal, unreported and unregulate­d fishing,” said Vince Cinches, oceans campaigner of Greenpeace Philippine­s.”

Data from the Philippine Statistics Authority showed fisherfolk­s remained the poorest among the basic sectors in the country, with poverty incidence in this sector pegged at 39.2 percent in 2012.

The National Anti-Poverty Commission, which was created in 1997 through Republic Act No. 8425, listed 12 other basic sectors, namely migrant workers, workers in the informal sector, indigenous peoples and cultural communitie­s, women, differentl­y-abled persons, senior citizens, victims of calamities and disasters, youth and students, children and urban poor.

The conservati­onist groups laid down their recommenda­tions for the Duterte administra­tion. Dubbed the “10-point Blue Agenda,” the groups asked for the delineatio­n of municipal waters, a fisherfolk settlement program, implementa­tion of traceabili­ty mechanisms for fishery products, capacity-building for fisherfolk to better adapt to climate change, and sustainabl­e fishing.

“We strongly support the creation of a Department of Oceans and Fisheries for improved fisheries governance and strict enforcemen­t of Republic Act 10654 (Amended Fisheries Code),” added Joann Binondo of the WWF.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines