US Coast Guard To Tackle China’s 'Illegal' Fishing

A US Coast Guard stands aboard a patrol boat as he documents oil tankers anchored near the ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles amid the coronavirus pandemic on 1 May, 2020. (AFP Photo)

The United States (US) said Friday it will deploy Coast Guard patrol ships in the western Pacific to counter "destabilising and malign" activities by China in disputed fishing grounds of the South China Sea. 

The US is accusing China of "illegal" and "unregulated" fishing, as well as "harassment" of fishing boats from regional countries. 

White House National Security Advisor Robert O'Brien said in a statement that the US Coast Guard "is strategically homeporting significantly enhanced Fast Response Cutters...in the western Pacific."  

These Sentinel class vessels will carry out maritime security operations, including helping fishing boats. 

This will be carried out "in collaboration with regional partners who have limited offshore surveillance and enforcement capacity, and ensure freedom of navigation," he said.

‘Catalogue Of Bad Behaviour’ 

Washington regularly accuses China of breaking international law by sending its warships as escorts for Chinese fishing vessels into the fishing grounds of other countries.

In July, US Defense Secretary Mark Esper slammed a "catalogue of bad behaviour" in the South China Sea over the previous months.

He accused the Chinese military of having sunk a Vietnamese fishing boat, harassing Malaysian oil and gas development and escorting Chinese fishing fleets into Indonesia's exclusive economic zone.

O'Brien added that the Coast Guard, which is under the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), was also studying whether to permanently station several of its patrol ships in the area of American Samoa in the South Pacific.

Last month, Indonesia protested about an incursion by Chinese coastguard ships in its exclusive economic zone. 

The exclusive economic zone is situated between its own territorial waters and international waters and where the state claims exclusive rights to exploit natural resources.

China claims almost the whole of the South China Sea as its own, a claim contested by several countries including Malaysia, Taiwan, the Philippines, and Indonesia. - AFP