Indonesia Questions China Over Burials at Sea
Indonesia has summoned China’s ambassador to clarify the deaths of four Indonesian crew from two Chinese-flagged vessels, Indonesia’s foreign ministry said, after rights groups alleged the crew were mistreated and exploited.
The ministry issued a statement after a video was circulated on social media, appearing to show a burial at sea aboard a Chinese-flagged ship. The footage showed a group of men praying around an orange body bag before it was tossed into the ocean.
A Chinese embassy official in Jakarta did not immediately respond to a request for comment after the ambassador was summoned.
Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi later told a news conference that three Indonesian crew members had died aboard Chinese-flagged fishing vessels since December and had been buried at sea.
“One crew member died and was buried at sea on March 31. In December 2019, two other crew members...died and were also buried at sea,” Marsudi said, adding that another crew member crew died onshore of pneumonia in a hospital in the South Korean port of Busan.
Marsudi said she had asked Xiao Qian, Chiana’s ambassador to Indonesia, for clarification of whether the burials had been carried out at sea in accordance with International Labour Organization (ILO) rules and whether “unsuitable” conditions on board the vessels contributed to the deaths.
The Environmental Justice Foundation (EJF), a British-based environmental rights group, alleged in a statement that some crew members had worked 18 hours a day, were paid little more than $1 a day and those who fell sick were not immediately taken for medical treatment ashore.
“Advocates for Public interest law (APIL) and EJF are calling for an urgent investigation by Chinese and international authorities into the conduct of this fleet of vessels,” EJF said.
(Reporting by Nilufar Rizki and Fathin Ungku, Editing by Ed Davies and Timothy Heritage)