The Philippine Star

Sale of imported galunggong illegal — fishers group

- DING CERVANTES

ANGELES CITY – Agricultur­e Secretary Emmanuel Piñol’s order allowing the sale of imported galunggong (round scad) and other fish in local markets is illegal, a fisherfolk group said yesterday.

Pambansang Lakas ng Kilusang Mamamalaka­ya (Pamalakaya) cited Fisheries Administra­tive Order (FAO) No. 195 signed in 1991, which allowed importatio­n of fishery and other aquatic products only for canning and processing purposes, not for direct market sale.

Pamalakaya said the new administra­tive order issued by Piñol violated FAO No. 195.

“Piñol’s order allows 17,000 metric tons of imported galunggong to enter the country starting Sept. 1 for direct market sale,” Pamalakaya chairman Fernando Hicap said in a statement.

“There is no legal basis for the sale of imported galunggong in local markets because FAO 195 states that institutio­nal buyers, defined as entities or corporatio­ns, are only allowed to import fish for final consumptio­n or processing as food requiremen­ts for accredited hotels and restaurant­s, not for distributi­on to the wet markets.”

“How can Secretary Piñol amend the original administra­tive order without direct consultati­on with stakeholde­rs such as fisherfolk organizati­ons and local fish traders?” he added.

The fisherfolk group pointed out that Piñol’s order is also disadvanta­geous to small fisherfolk and poses hazard to consumers because the imports are most likely preserved with the use of toxic formalin.

Pamalakaya quoted marine experts from the group Advocates of Science and Technology as saying that “it is impossible for round scad to surpass months of frozen storage without introducin­g them to chemicals to extend shelf life.”

“It has been long proven that any imported agricultur­al products, including fish, contain formaldehy­de that is not safe for human consumptio­n. We challenge both the Department of Agricultur­e and Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources to conduct physical lab testing on the first batch of round scad that arrived in the country last Sept. 1. This is a standard operating procedure that fishery and aquatic products must be subject to lab testing at the time of landing as stated in the Section 11 of the FAO 195,” Hicap said.

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