Statement of the International Collective in Support of Fishworkers
(ICSF)
93rd Session 2005 of the International Labour Conference
31 May to 16 June 2005
Committee on the Fishing Sector | Download PDF |
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The
proposed Convention and Recommendation contained in Report V (2B)
concerning work in the fishing sector go a long way in protecting and
promoting
rights of fishers to decent conditions of work. However, it falls short
of promoting the
rights of fishers who undertake commercial beach seine operations,
diving and
gleaning that do not necessarily involve the use of any fishing vessels.
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While commercial beach seine operations are widespread in Asia and Africa,
commercial shellfish gathering through diving and gleaning are common all over the
world. The latter category also employs a large number of persons, including women.
Extending provisions of health protection, medical care and social security to this
category of persons, where reasonable and practicable, would do justice to women in
fishing, in particular, and it will help the proposed Convention to meaningfully
address fishing activities where women’s participation is more important than that of
men’s. This would, however, require broadening the definition of a “fisher” in the
proposed Convention also to include those employed in shore-based fishing
operations who do not necessarily work on board any fishing vessel.
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ICSF’s consultations with artisanal and small-scale fishers’ organizations in
Africa, Asia and Latin America since the 92nd Session of the International Labour
Conference 2004, demonstrate an overwhelming support to the inclusion of social
security provisions in the proposed Convention and it has been suggested that such
provisions should extend to fishers irrespective of their sphere of fishing operation. It
has been further proposed that these provisions should be no less than those included
under the 1952 Minimum Standards for Social Security Convention (C.102).
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The December 2004 tsunami in the Indian Ocean that took an unprecedented
toll of human lives, at least 300,000, including a large number of fishermen and
women from coastal fishing communities, is a sad testimony to the urgent need for
social security measures for small-scale fishers. Very few of the fishers who perished
in the tsunami wave-surge in the affected countries came under any social security
scheme.
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Moreover, while welcoming the proposed degree of flexibility in relation to
minimum age, medical examination, occupational safety and health and fishers’ work
agreement, the artisanal and small-scale fishers urge that the provisions for artisanal
and small-scale fishing vessels undertaking international fishing voyages should be no
different from those applicable to larger vessels undertaking such voyages.
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As far as larger vessels are concerned, ICSF would like the proposed Work in
Fishing Convention, 2005, to ensure that the protection afforded to fishers on board
larger vessels by current ILO instruments are at least retained, if not further improved.
The ILO should make efforts to link up proposed labour standards with international
instruments for fisheries management, particularly at the level of regional fisheries
management organizations and ensure that effective labour standards for crew on
board larger fishing vessels are a pre-requisite for effective fisheries management,
especially with regard to straddling fish stocks and highly migratory fish stocks.
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Last but not least, ICSF would like to wish the Committee all success in its
deliberations and would like to see a Convention sufficiently flexible and protective
for artisanal and small-scale fishing, on the one hand, and adequately prescriptive for
large-scale fishing operations, on the other.
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We would also like to take this opportunity to announce a panel discussion on
ILO Labour Standards for the Fishing Sector: A Small-Scale Fisheries Perspective
that will be held on Tuesday, 14 June 2005 from 14.30 to 17.30 hrs at the John Knox
International Center, 27 ch. des Crêts-de-Pregny, CH-1218, Grand-Saconnex, Genève,
Suisse, Tel: 0041-22-747 0000. ICSF is happy to invite all interested members of this
Committee to the panel discussion where representatives of small-scale fishers from
Africa, Asia, and Latin America are expected to speak.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
01 June 2005
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