Patrick Winn |
GlobalPost.com |
May 26, 2012
PREY VENG, Cambodia, and SAMUT SAKHON, Thailand — In the sun-baked
flatlands of Cambodia, where dust stings the eyes and chokes the pores,
there is a tiny clapboard house on cement stilts. It is home to three
generations of runaway slaves.
The man of the house, Sokha, recently returned after nearly two years
in captivity. His home is just as he left it: barren with a few dirty
pillows passing for furniture. Slivers of daylight glow through cracks
in the walls. The family’s most valuable possession, a sow, waddles and
snorts beneath the elevated floorboards.
Before his December escape, Sokha (a pseudonym) was the property of a
deep-sea trawler captain. The 39-year-old Cambodian, his teenage son
and two young nephews were purchased for roughly $650, he said, each
through brokers promising under-the-table jobs in a fish cannery.
There was no cannery. They were instead smuggled to a pier in
neighboring Thailand, where they were shoved aboard a wooden vessel that
motored into a lawless sea. His uncle had fallen for the same scam five
years prior and escaped to warn the others. But Sokha told his son,
then just 16, that this venture would turn out differently. He was
wrong.
“We worked constantly, for no pay, through seasickness and vomiting,
sometimes for two or three days straight,” he said. “We obeyed the
captain’s every word.”
Near-daily death threats reinforced the captain’s supremacy. So did
his Vietnam War-era K-54 pistol, and the night he carved up another
slave’s face in view of the crew. “For 20 hours a day, we were forced to
catch and sort sea creatures: mackerel, crabs, squid." It's back-breaking work, under the searing tropical sun. "But the fish wasn’t for us,” he added.
So who was it all for?
The answer should unsettle anyone who closely examines
Thailand’s multi-billion dollar wild-caught seafood industry and the
darkest links in its supply chain.
“It’s an export-oriented market. And we know the countries where
these products are exported to,” said Lisa Rende Taylor, chief technical
specialist with the United Nations Inter-Agency Project on Human
Trafficking or UNIAP. “Do the math.”
For Americans, the calculation is worrisome. Thailand is the United
States’ second-largest supplier of foreign seafood. Of America's total
seafood imports, one out of every six pounds comes from the Southeast
Asian nation.
In 2011 alone, Thailand exported 827 million pounds of seafood worth
more than $2.5 billion to the US, according to National Marine Fisheries
Service figures. The only nation that consumes more Thai seafood exports is Japan.
Sokha, a 39-year-old Cambodian,
escaped slavery aboard a Thai-owned trawler boat with his teenage son
and two young nephews. He is seen here inside his Prey Veng province
stilted house, which is now home to three generations of men who've fled
slavery on Thai boats. (Patrick Winn/Global Post) |
Globalization-era America appears increasingly conscience-stricken
over abuses against poor foreigners who make their consumables. Consider
the fair-trade certification phenomenon, the dismay over African “blood diamonds” and, more recently, the outcry over sweatshop conditions in Chinese plants producing flashy gadgets for Apple and others.
But a monotonous job assembling iPads is heaven compared to slavery
on a Thai trawler, where conditions are as grueling and violent as any
19th-century American plantation. The lucky escape within a year or so.
Less fortunate are those traded several times over for years on end.
Murder is an occupational hazard.
Denying that the fruits of forced labor reach the biggest importers
of Thai seafood — Japan, America, China and the European Union — has
become increasingly implausible.
The accounts of ex-slaves, Thai fishing syndicates, officials,
exporters and anti-trafficking case workers, gathered by GlobalPost in a
three-month investigation, illuminate an opaque offshore supply chain
enmeshed in slavery.
A long trail of offshore operators — slave boats, motherships and
independent fishmongers — can obfuscate the origins of slave-caught
seafood before it ever reaches the shore. While the industry’s biggest
earners rely on clannish and violence-prone fishing crews for raw
material, they’re distanced from the worst abuses by hundreds of
nautical miles and several degrees of middlemen.
The result is that many Thai factory bosses have no idea who caught the seafood they process for foreign consumers.
There are caveats. The majority of Thailand’s two largest seafood
exports to the US — tuna and shrimp — are sourced differently. Most
“Thai” tuna is actually imported from overseas and processed for
re-export. The shrimp industry, though routinely accused of abusing poor
migrants, is at least vulnerable to spot checks on seaside farms.
The same cannot be said for deep-sea trawlers, the favored vessel of slave-driving captains.
The species caught by Thai trawlers legal and illicit alike include
sardines, mackerel, cuttlefish, squid, anchovies and "trash fish," tiny
or foul-tasting catch ground into animal food or preserved to create
fish sauce. Americans consume these breeds en masse. One in five pounds
of America's imported mackerel or sardines comes from Thailand,
according to US government records. For processed fish balls, puddings
or cakes — made from trawlers' trash fish — the figure is one in three
pounds. Thai fish sauce supplies nearly 80 percent of the American
market.
All that trawler catch ends up in familiar American fare: anchovy
pizzas, squid linguine, smoked mackerel salads and fish fillets on ice.
Even pets are entangled: trash fish is a common dog- and cat-food
ingredient. But industry representatives in Thailand admit there's often
no way to tell whether a particular package of deep-sea fish was caught
using forced labor.
Using bar codes, American shoppers can track packaged Thai-exported
seafood to its onshore processing facility, said Arthon
Piboonthanapatana, secretary general of the Thai Frozen Foods
Association. "You can trace it back to the factories."
But exporters, he said, are not in the business of policing the
fishing syndicates that supply their factories. “We only have the power
to enforce our members,” Arthon said. “We have no power to enforce other
stakeholders such as boats or fishermen.”
American seafood importers consider themselves similarly powerless in
overseeing far-flung Thai boats. "Western regulatory agencies have
little or no reach, or authority, over various parts of the value
chain," said Gavin Gibbons, spokesman for the National Fisheries
Institute, America's chief seafood trade organization and lobbying group
based outside Washington, DC. The institute will promptly respond to
allegations against specific factories, he said. But so far, it has not
found an effective way to monitor conditions on deep-sea boats catching
US-bound fish.
"We have started discussions with our members about just how far an
audit could realistically go and whether, perhaps, there are dockside
audits that could be developed," Gibbons said.
The "nature of boats being at sea," he said, presents a major challenge to industry's self-policing efforts.
International pressure to rid Thailand’s seafood trade of slavery is
mounting. Thailand teeters just above the US State Department’s worst
human-trafficking ranking and could be downgraded this summer. Last
year, during a visit that vexed Bangkok officials, a UN rapporteur
declared that forced labor is “notoriously common” in Thailand’s fishing
sector and even alleged police complicity.
“It’s not like monitoring brothels, plantations or factories ... all
this labor is at sea,” Rende Taylor said. “So it’s essentially a
universe where captains are king. Some are out to make as much money as
possible by working these guys around the clock and being as cruel as
they want to be.”
No comments:
Post a Comment