“Dark fleets” of hundreds of Chinese vessels are fishing illegally in North Korean waters, according to a study, forcing displaced local fishermen to risk their lives in distant waters in unsafe boats, many of which are carried across rough seas to the coast of Japan. In a report published on Wednesday in the journal Science Advances, Global Fishing Watch (GFW), says more than 900 vessels of Chinese origin fished illegally in the area in 2017, and 700 in 2018.
Together it is estimated they caught more than 160,000 metric tonnes of squid, worth more than $440m (£346m).
The organisation said illegal Chinese fishing over the two-year period was probably a breach of UN sanctions banning North Korea from earning foreign currency through, for example, the provision of fishing licences to foreign vessels.
“The scale of the fleet involved in this illegal fishing is about one-third the size of China’s entire distant-water fishing fleet. It is the largest known case of illegal fishing perpetrated by vessels originating from one country operating in another nation’s waters,” said Jaeyoon Park, a senior data scientist at GFW and co-lead author of the study. “By synthesising data from multiple satellite sensors, we created an unprecedented, robust picture of fishing activity in a notoriously opaque region.”
The Chinese vessels are displacing local fleets, forcing about 3,000 North Korean boats to catch squid illegally in Russian waters in 2018, the report says. Some run out of fuel or experience engine trouble and are carried to the coast of Japan by fierce currents and strong prevailing winds.
Over the past five years, Japanese media have reported almost 600 North Korean “ghost ships” along the coast of Japan – including 158 last year – some containing the decomposed corpses of their crew. The high death toll among fishermen has created “widows’ villages” on the east coast of North Korea, according to GFW.
Source: Guardian