A special fund has been set up to aid Filipino fishermen and their families affected by Typhoon Haiyan. The fund was set up by the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People and announced along with the message the Council has released for World Fisheries Day, 21 November.

“More than half of the people affected by in the Philippines by Typhoon Haiyan are fishermen who lost everything: their loved ones, their homes and their work tools, the press release reads. “The fund will be used for long-term projects, including the reconstruction of homes, the purchase of boats, motors and fishing nets and scholarships for orphans.

John Green, director of development for The Apostleship of the Sea in London, spoke to the fundraising effort.

“It is really a necessity that these poor people who are often very voicelessthey are so involved in their work and sustaining their livingthat attention is paid to them to replace their equipment, he said.

The Apostleship of the Sea is very active in the area, he reported. There is a large seafarers centre in Cebu, which is acting as a hub for the distribution of relief, as well as a seafarers’ wives association, which is helping the wives of fisherman to pick up the pieces.

CONCRETE ACTION
World Fisheries Day has two main objectives: to draw attention to overfishing and to draw attention to the very precarious situation of fishermen and of families involved in the fishing industry.

Fishing is one of the most dangerous occupations that one can be involved in and remains a largely unreported and unregulated industry, said Green.

The message issued by the Pontifical Council addresses this point along with other urgent issues facing the fishing industry. First, the intense “logic of profit driving the industry translates into long hours for fishermen and, consequently, an increase of injuries and fatalities on the job. The families of fisherman are also adversely affected by the father’s long absences.

As well, the message reads, “the globalization of fishing and labour shortages have created a new and troubling phenomenon to be reckoned with… the exploitation of migrant workers who, because of poverty and misery, easily fall prey to recruitment agencies that bind them to forms of forced labour.

World Fisheries Day is intended to raise awareness, said Green, but it is also a call to concrete action: prayer for the resolution of the injustices facing fishermen; responsible consumption of fish; and citizen action, urging government representatives to ratify the International Labour Organization’s 2007 Work in Fishing Convention. The convention seeks to set just working conditions for the fishing industry.

“There are many websites, one is the Marine Stewardship Council website, you can look up and find out which fish are in season and which are out of season and by buying those fish that are in season, you foster a mentality for responsible care for fish stocks, Green urged.

Information on the special Filipino fishermen’s fund can be had on the Council’s website: www.pcmigrants.org.

Listen to Laura Ieraci’s full interview with John Green of The Apostleship of the Sea: RealAudioMP3

Read the full message for World Fisheries Day 2013, issued by the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People, below:

“Every year on November 21st, fishing communities around the world celebrate World Fisheries Day to highlight the precarious situation in which many of them live, as well as the importance of preserving the resources of the sea.
“In recent years, the fishing sector has grown according to the logic of profit: fill the nets as much as possible, in the shortest possible time often, with little consideration for fish stocks and for the time required for their reproduction. The aim of making more money affects the whole fishing world from the industrial to the artisanal one, and leads fishers to work long hours, sometimes in bad weather, with an excess of fatigue that often is the cause of injuries and sometimes even of fatal accidents. Generally, but especially in cases of tragedies at work, social protection for the fisher and his family is minimal, if not non-existent.
“Within the industrial fisheries, employment contracts are incomplete or illegal, the salary is inadequate, and minimum safety requirements on-board are lacking, meanwhile in the artisanal fisheries, coastal pollution and destruction along the coasts of the natural habitat of reproduction force the fishers to go further and further offshore with inadequate boats, endangering their lives.
“Family relationships of those engaged in fishing are put to the test by prolonged stays at sea and very short permanence in the family. The fisher’s wife courageously faces the difficulties caused by the absence of the husband, assuming the dual role of father and mother, with serious implications for the growth and education of their children.
“The work schedule and the hard life, sometimes associated with the lack of education, makes the fishers ‘voiceless’ people in society, incapable of enforcing their rights, often marginalized and isolated.
“Finally, the globalization of fishing and labor shortages have created a new and troubling phenomenon to be reckoned with. We are talking about the exploitation of migrant workers who, because of poverty and misery, easily fall prey to recruitment agencies that bind them to forms of forced labor, becoming at times victims of trafficking on board fishing vessels.
“Recalling the words of Pope Benedict XVI addressed to the participants of the XXIII World Congress, held in Vatican City in November 2012: ‘To you fishermen, who seek decent and safe working conditions, safeguarding the dignity of your families, the protection of the environment and the defense of every person’s dignity, I would like to ensure the Church’s closeness’. The AOS, once more, wants to be the voice of the voiceless and to expose the problems and difficult working/living conditions of fishers and their families.
“We renew our appeal to all governments to ratify, as soon as possible, the Work in Fishing Convention 2007 (No. 188) to ensure safety at work to those employed in the fisheries, to ensure ongoing medical care, sufficient hours of rest, the protection of a contract of employment, and the same social benefits enjoyed by workers on the ground.
“Finally, making ours the words of Pope Francis, let us pray together Mary, the ‘Star of the Sea’, to support the chaplains and volunteers of the Apostleship of the Sea in their pastoral service to the people of the sea, and to protect fishers and their families from all danger: ‘Mother of God and our Mother, turn your sweet gaze towards those who face the dangers of the sea everyday to guarantee their families the necessary sustenance for life, to protect the respect of creation, to serve peace between peoples.’