https://www.asiatimes.com/2019/06/article/indonesia-vs-china-in-a-fish-fight-at-sea/
*Indonesia vs China in a fish fight at sea*

Fisheries Minister Susi Pudjiastuti is going toe-to-toe with Chinese and
other foreign poachers she claims illegally take 80% of her nation’s catch

*ByJOHN MCBETH, JAKARTA*
The catch has expanded dramatically, the fish are bigger and new canneries
have sprung up all around Indonesia, all apparent signs of a hale and
hearty fisheries industry.

But Fisheries Minister Susi Pudjiastuti continues to fight a constant
battle since she banned foreign trawlers from Indonesian waters in arguably
one of the most notable achievements of Joko Widodo’s first term as
president.

In an interview with Asia Times, Pudjiastuti said she believes up to 80% of
the nation’s catch is still exported illegally or offloaded on to foreign,
often Chinese-owned, mother ships outside its 200-mile economic exclusion
zone (EEZ) – a transshipment practice she wants declared an international
crime.

Moreover, she says only a quarter of the estimated 3,000 new 100-200 tonne
fishing boats built locally in the past three years have been properly
registered; the rest are painted the same color and carry duplicate names
to avoid paying taxes.

There is big money involved for the 100 or so Indonesian businessmen
involved, of whom about 20 own 4,500 of the 7,600 registered boats above 30
tonnes, according to the minister. Annual profits, she says, range from
US$1-2 million for 30-100 tonne vessels, and $2-4 million for those in the
100-200 tonne capacity.

The result: many of the Indonesian businessmen who previously engaged in
flawed joint ventures with Chinese, Thai and other large regional fishing
companies to plunder their country’s maritime resources are now finding
ways to do it independently.

Workers unload yellowfin tuna at a port in Banda Aceh, Indonesia, April 4,
2019. Photo: AFP/Chaideer Mahyuddin

Despite all that, the fisheries sector’s contribution to gross domestic
product (GDP) has risen from 7.3% to 7.9% in the past three years, growing
by 5.7% per year and making Indonesia into the world’s second-biggest
producer of fisheries and aquaculture, according to the 2018 European Union
Fish Market Report.

Five years after the ban’s enforcement, Indonesia is now the largest
producer of tuna, representing 16% of the world total, half of which is
exported to the US in the form of frozen whole fish and fillets. It is a
lucrative market that has grown by 130% since 2014.

After suffering through difficult early years of the ban due to a lack of
fish, the North Sulawesi fishing port of Bitung, for example, is now home
to 47 canneries from just a handful a few years ago, processing a large
percentage of the 76,700 tonnes of canned tuna Indonesia exported in 2017.

Pudjiastuti, a 54-year-old rags-to-riches entrepreneur who parlayed her
West Java seafood processing business into the world’s largest small-plane
airline, says Indonesian fishermen are now catching 80-kilogram tuna,
almost twice the size of several years ago.

The Chinese have predictably sought to undercut Indonesia’s actions by
using satellite systems that detect water density and direct fishing fleets
to biomass concentrations of mainly tuna and tuna-like species before they
reach Indonesian waters.

Satellite imagery shows nearly 4,000 fishing boats and support craft around
Micronesia in the Western Pacific at any one time, about 85% of them from
China and Taiwan. It is a picture that raises concerns about sustainability
in nearby Indonesia.

“[Pudjiastuti’s] policies have been very effective,” says one maritime
analyst who tracks the movement of China’s vast fishing fleet in the
Western Pacific. “They (the Chinese) are now trying to get everything
before it gets into Indonesian waters.”

[image: Indonesian Fisheries Minister Susi Pudjiastuti has overseen the
demolition of foreign fishing boats caught poaching in Indonesian waters.
Photo: NurPhoto via AFP Forum/(Donal Husni]Indonesian Fisheries Minister
Susi Pudjiastuti has overseen the demolition of foreign fishing boats
caught poaching in Indonesian waters. Photo: NurPhoto via AFP Forum/Donal
Husni

Chinese vessels often turn off their transponders or change the Maritime
Mobile Service Identity (MMSI) international maritime regulations require
of every ship over 100 tonnes.

There are other ploys as well. On one recent day, a vessel purportedly
registered in land-locked Afghanistan showed up in the midst of a Chinese
fleet.

While Beijing uses its fishermen – and accompanying Coastguard and militia
patrol craft – as part of its forward deployment, Indonesia is taking a
leaf out of its book by adapting similar tactics in the southern reaches of
the South China Sea, which China claims as part of its traditional fishing
grounds.

Pudjiastuti says there are now 600 Indonesian fishing boats operating out
of the Natuna islands, Indonesia’s northernmost territory, where the
government is building a cold storage and fish processing facility and
temporary accommodations for fishermen.

With navy vessels regularly patrolling what Indonesia has renamed as the
North Natuna Sea, there are plans to deploy a tanker to refuel the fishing
fleet, acquire small surveillance drones and also to extend the runway on
Natuna Besar, the chain’s main island.

Chinese trawlers have generally steered clear of Indonesian waters in the
past 18 months, but it is well known Pudjiastuti and chief maritime
minister Luhut Panjaitan don’t get on for reasons which underline
Indonesia’s many internal difficulties in dealing with China.

She remains single-minded and stubborn towards the Chinese and their
fishing practices. He oversees many Chinese-funded projects in Indonesia,
including the long-delayed $6 billion Jakarta-Bandung fast railway that now
seems to be making some headway.

Pudjiastuti has also made enemies abroad by persisting in her policy of
sinking foreign fishing boats seized poaching in Indonesian waters after
learning that local surrogates of the owners were paying only $50,000 at
auction to get them back.

[image: The demolition and sinking of a pirate fishing ship by the
Indonesian Navy at the Pangandaran Sea, West Java. Photo: NurPhoto via AFP/
Donal Husni]The demolition and sinking of a pirate fishing ship by the
Indonesian Navy at the Pangandaran Sea, West Java. Photo: NurPhoto via AFP/
Donal Husni

Earlier in May, the Fisheries Ministry sank 51 more impounded boats,
bringing the total number of those destroyed to more than 500 since the
fishing ban was enforced as part of Widodo’s tough new maritime policy.

Among the latest batch to be scuttled were 38 Vietnamese-flagged vessels;
in recent months, the Vietnamese coast guard has been involved in four
incidents with Indonesian patrol craft inside the EEZ, leading Hanoi to
issue a diplomatic protest.

A video of the latest incident circulated on social media showed a
Vietnamese vessel ramming the side of an Indonesian corvette, one of
several acquired from the old East German navy in the early 1990s, while
rifle-toting Indonesian sailors shouted abuse.

Indonesia is the first country in the world to make public real-time data
on the location of all vessels in its waters, employing the Automated
Identification System and Italian-developed imagery to create an overview
across three times zones stretching from Aceh to Papua.

Most of the focus of the Fisheries Ministry and separate systems used by
the navy and police is on key waterways, such as the Malacca, Sunda and
Lombok straits, the Natuna islands and the Makassar Strait and further east
to Papua, where the navy is forming a third fleet based out of the old oil
port of Sorong.

Sometimes the Indonesians have been caught by surprise. In a little-known
incident in April 2018, a navy fast patrol craft intercepted the Chinese
satellite tracking ship Yuan Wan 7 after it veered out of an international
shipping lane off of the northeast island of Sulawesi.

Informed sources say the navy’s attention was drawn to the way the
21,000-tonne vessel was making erratic maneuvers inconsistent with a normal
transit. No radio contact was made between the two vessels and the Yuan
Wang swiftly reversed course and headed north into international waters.

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