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China playing public relations game focused on cooperative conservation

July 22, 2019 โ€” The vigor with which the government has prosecuted its crackdown in domestic waters has certainly been unprecedented this year in China โ€“ it seems that every village government in the country has had a publicity event that involves pouring bags of fish seedlings into local waters.

China appears to also be playing a clever public relations game by embracing neighbors in joint fisheries rehabilitation projects that are also helping to keep a lid on simmering disputes over territorial waters and illegal fishing.

For instance, last week, a delegation of Filipino fishery officials led by the deputy head of the agriculture and fishery ministry in Manila travelled to Beijing for the third annual โ€œChina Philippines United Fishery Committee.โ€ The meeting was a recap on all thatโ€™s been achieved in three years of activity, according to a Chinese summary of the meeting featured prominently in local media reporting.

โ€œChina continues to donate grouper fish seedlings to the Philippinesโ€ฆwe have been training Filipino fishermen in aquaculture and algae technology and we are together fighting illegal fishing,โ€ noted a statement from the Chinese ministry. China and the Philippines are working together to resolve any territorial disputes, according to the ministry.

Meanwhile, Chinese state TV didnโ€™t devote much air time to the update from the arbitral tribunal at the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague, which found in favor of Manilaโ€™s case against Beijingโ€™s claims in the South China Sea in July 2016. Convened under the compulsory dispute settlement provisions of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), the tribunalโ€™s five arbitrators ruled overwhelmingly in the Philippinesโ€™ favor. Three years on, China is in compliance with just two out of the 11 parts making up the ruling.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

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