Philippine Daily Inquirer

ILLEGAL FISHERS BACK IN QUEZON, TAP KIDS AS WORKERS

- FIN T. MALLARI JR. —DEL-

Illegal fishers are back in the bays of Tayabas and Lamon in Quezon province, this time with minors reportedly working on fishing boats, an official of an environmen­tal group said.

“The recruitmen­t of minors as boat workers will give birth to the next generation of illegal fishers. It will be an endless cycle of environmen­tal destructio­n,” Zeny Bernal, Tanggol Kalikasan (TK) Southern Luzon program director, said on Wednesday.

She said TK, a public interest law office which advocates environmen­tal protection, had been receiving reports of resurgence of blast fishing and other illegal fishing activities in the province’s waters.

Bernal said their reports also indicated the continuous opera- tions of commercial fishers whose boats used the destructiv­e “pangulong” (purse seines), “taksay” (ring nets) and “bulibuli” (modified Danish seine).

“But what was more disturbing were the reports that most illegal fishers had been recruiting teenage boys as crew mem- bers,” she said.

A patrol team from the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, she said, encountere­d illegal fishers in the waters of Tayabas Bay in Lucena City on Monday.

“Most crew members, who were youngsters, were able to jump out of the boats,” Bernal said.

Years of illegal and commercial fishing and pollution had damaged Tayabas Bay, which covers 287,332 hectares, according to a TK study.

Bernal called on local officials and their social welfare officers to stop the recruitmen­t of minors in illegal activities at sea.

The depletion of marine resources in Lamon Bay in northern Quezon and Tayabas Bay covering parts of Quezon, Marinduque and Batangas provinces has long been the subject of concern among environmen­talists.

TK has started a rehabilita­tion project aimed at reducing threats and improving sustainabl­e management of marine resources in Quezon’s waters, particular­ly Tayabas Bay.

 ??  ?? Commercial fishing operators in Tayabas Bay and Lamon Bay in Quezon province, according to an environmen­tal group, are recruiting minors as extra hands in their fishing boats.
Commercial fishing operators in Tayabas Bay and Lamon Bay in Quezon province, according to an environmen­tal group, are recruiting minors as extra hands in their fishing boats.

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