Why are Chinese fishing vessels still docked off Koh Kong ?
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Why are Chinese fishing vessels still docked off Koh Kong ?
- More than six months after being detained by authorities in Koh Kong, 18 Chinese fishing trawlers moored off Cambodia’s coast remain in place, as does uncertainty about why the vessels ended up in the Kingdom’s waters in the first place.
Speaking on Sunday, Koh Kong Provincial Governor Bun Leut said authorities were still waiting for a “solution” for the vessels, which were detained by Cambodia’s navy in July of last year, according to a Post interview with a Navy boat captain in August.
“[The trawlers] strayed in into our territory and we have detained them for a long time,” Leut said, maintaining that the vessels had not fished in Cambodian waters.
“We have kept the boats for the embassy to come to check and find a solution … the representative of the Chinese Embassy has visited the boats and recognised the boats as belonging to them and has lodged documents with our government.”
Leut said he was unsure why the ships had arrived. He mentioned their contract to dock in another country might have expired. In August, a navy official told The Post that the trawlers had left Thailand after their licence to dock there expired.
In August, a Chinese Embassy representative said the boats were “temporarily” in Cambodia’s waters because they needed repairs.
Speaking by phone, Wang De Xin, chief of the Chinese Embassy’s political section, said the boats had sustained damage from big waves, and more time was needed.
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/c ... d-koh-kong
From the previous August 2016 article. Curious. The Navy Chief of Staff knows nothing...
Speaking on Sunday, Koh Kong Provincial Governor Bun Leut said authorities were still waiting for a “solution” for the vessels, which were detained by Cambodia’s navy in July of last year, according to a Post interview with a Navy boat captain in August.
“[The trawlers] strayed in into our territory and we have detained them for a long time,” Leut said, maintaining that the vessels had not fished in Cambodian waters.
“We have kept the boats for the embassy to come to check and find a solution … the representative of the Chinese Embassy has visited the boats and recognised the boats as belonging to them and has lodged documents with our government.”
Leut said he was unsure why the ships had arrived. He mentioned their contract to dock in another country might have expired. In August, a navy official told The Post that the trawlers had left Thailand after their licence to dock there expired.
In August, a Chinese Embassy representative said the boats were “temporarily” in Cambodia’s waters because they needed repairs.
Speaking by phone, Wang De Xin, chief of the Chinese Embassy’s political section, said the boats had sustained damage from big waves, and more time was needed.
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/c ... d-koh-kong
From the previous August 2016 article. Curious. The Navy Chief of Staff knows nothing...
However:Earlier this month, Navy Chief of Staff Mei Dina told the Post the Open Seas Security forces had detained some of the Chinese vessels in mid-July.
“Before these boats paid tax in Thailand for [docking], but when their licence had expired, the Thai [authorities] had asked them to move out,” he said, adding: “We do not know who those boats had communicated with.”
“We do not know who is behind this and it might be related to a small or big man,” he said.
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/n ... d-trawlersLocal fisherman Sok Chea, 30, on Thursday told Post reporters that he had seen a Navy vessel with seven soldiers escort the trawlers a month ago to their present location near the Oao Wov naval base, a few minutes by sea from Koh Kapi village.
“There were our Cambodian solders protecting those boats . . . They are stationed on the boats with Chinese crews, taking shifts,” he said
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