2 Chinese Vessels Arrested In Vanuatu

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    Posted: 26 Jan 2021 at 10:10am
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From FB;

CAPTURED: Two Chinese fishing boats under arrest in Vanuatu. Donggangxing 13 and 16 are moored on the main wharf at Luganville, Espiritu Santo, in northern Vanuatu. It is the same wharf that Australian media previously described as a possible Chinese military base.
It is far from clear why these two vessels are under arrest as the online paperwork by both Vanuatu and regional fisheries bodies suggest they are legally allowed to operate.
Known as “pot vessels” the 577 ton vessels target groper, bêche-de-mer and lobster.
Both vessels are relatively new, built in 2018 and owned by Zhuhai Donggangxing Ocean Fishing Co of Zhuhai, China.
Both vessels appear to have been built in haste after Beijing agreed in international forums to limit the construction of new vessels.
These were built to beat the ban and are touted as part of a fleet of ten that are to be based in Luganville. The operation is billed as part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative.


"The sea, once it casts its spell, holds one in its net of wonder forever." - Jacques Cousteau
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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote Alan L Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 26 Jan 2021 at 10:50am
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They were pinged at the Vtu Govts request - by an air surveillenace from New Cal.
They were fishing inside restricted waters.
There are about 150 current fishing permits for Chinese boats. These two were not in the pernitted area, as confirmed by the New Cal surveilllance.
Alan 
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Originally posted by Alan L Alan L wrote:

They were pinged at the Vtu Govts request - by an air surveillenace from New Cal.
They were fishing inside restricted waters.
There are about 150 current fishing permits for Chinese boats. These two were not in the pernitted area, as confirmed by the New Cal surveilllance.
Alan 

Hey mate ... why didn't you go out & ram them ... give them a real scare !!!!
When you cry, feel pain or sadness, no one notices your sorrow .... BUT
fart just ONE time !!!!!!!!!!!
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Post Options Post Options   Likes (1) Likes(1)   Quote Alan L Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 26 Jan 2021 at 11:31am
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Bit bigger than me. But I would like to sink a few of them. Well..... all of them really.
The French are good at blowing up boats. Maybe instead of an air surveillance plane they should send a few frogmen.
Alan
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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote Catchelot Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 26 Jan 2021 at 6:06pm
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WHAT’S BEHIND VANUATU’S CHINESE ARRESTS?
Docked and under some kind of arrest in Port Vila, Vanuatu, are two Chinese flagged fishing boats, allegedly caught in unauthorized waters.
Of course it makes headlines, but the truth here is decidedly murky.
The arrest of Donggongxing 13 and 16 is headline stuff; South Pacific nations seldom arrest Chinese boats. It causes too much trouble with Beijing.
After all there are between 200 and 300 Chinese boats operating in Vanuatu’s 663,251 square kilometre exclusive economic zone. Few of them are ever seen in Vila or Luganville; they all operate out China’s biggest South Pacific fishing base - Suva, Fiji.
All of them are either longliners or purse seiners, taking tuna.
But not these arrested boats.
Now this is odd - this is a case of the arrests being less significant than the class of boat.
In the Western and Central Pacific Fishing Commission (WCPFC) register of 3450 fishing boats there are just three - all three are Chinese - known as “pot vessels”.
The names of the exclusive three? Donggongxing 13, 16 and 17.
Why are the region’s only pot vessels sitting off Hiu in the Torres Islands?
The police map issued to the media shows they were arrested 32 kilometres west of Hiu. That puts them inside Vanuatu’s territorial waters (not the EEZ) as defined by the Marine Zones Act 2018.
As the Global Fishing Watch screen grab shows, there are plenty of Chinese boats (out of Suva) around Hiu - in the EEZ but not in territorial waters. Even the Chinese avoid going into territorial waters; getting caught is too easy (especially if the French send a jet aircraft).
However it should be noted that neither Donggongxing 13 nor 16 show up on Global Fishing Watch: they had their positioning systems switched off.
A tuna boat probably has no real reason to go into territorial waters, but WCPFC data gives a possible clue. The vessels were authorized to catch grouper and sea cucumber. Although beche de mer and grouper are ocean species, they are also easy to catch closer to shore, inside territorial waters. Its why the Vietnamese “blue boats” were reaching into the South Pacific. Both catches are lucrative.
All three Donggongxing vessels are owned by Zhuhai Dong Gang Xing Long Distance Fishing Co. Beijing has given the relatively new company permission to fish in Mauritania in Africa, and Vanuatu. Their permissions were given under the government’s “One Belt, One Road” (the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI)).
Because China has given an international commitment to eventually cut back on building new fishing boats, Dong Gang Xing has been constructing them quickly. Ten are targeting for the Pacific.
And this is where it gets odd; the company says they have permission under BRI to build a base in Vanuatu.
Why they believe this is not clear. Vanuatu has not said anything but has instead arrested two boats.
But were the two boats in territorial waters because they believed that under the deal between Vila and Beijing, Chinese boats can now enter territorial waters?
And if so, is Vanuatu heading for a diplomatic row with China?
"The sea, once it casts its spell, holds one in its net of wonder forever." - Jacques Cousteau
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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote Alan L Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 26 Jan 2021 at 6:51pm
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Yes - it struck me as odd that Vtu Govt would challenge China. I know who will will that scrap.
And beche de Mer is an odd one. Sea slug in another language. Protected species in Vtu.
There have been instances of poaching by the odd asian boats - but it is reasonably tightly controlled. This is shallow water stuff - snorkel diving on reefs usually. Buy them off the locals. After cyclone Pam  the Govt provided limited permits for locals on various islands to harvest the slugs - to sell to Asia. Revenue to tide them over until their gardens and normal business was restored. 
So there is some odd stuff going on here. It will be interesting to see what happens - but at the end of the day I think China will call the shots.
Alan
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