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NGOs are making a fresh push to protect migrant fishers' rights after a CNN exposé about working conditions on Taiwan's distant-water fishing fleet.

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00:00Taiwan has the world's second-largest deep-sea fishing fleet.
00:03There's a good chance the seafood in your local supermarket was trawled by a Taiwan-flagged ship.
00:08But there are growing concerns about conditions on board for the largely Southeast Asian crews.
00:13The story of Indonesian fishing worker Silwanus Tankota, detailed in a CNN report,
00:18has caused a stir in Taiwan and led NGOs to gather outside the Labor Ministry.
00:23A human rights activist among them recounts what allegedly happened far out in the Pacific.
00:30In addition to an accident, the natives'
00:57The article also alleges a pattern of wage theft, abuse, and counts at least one preventable death.
01:16Critics of the article say it focused on a few cherry-picked cases.
01:20But activists say systemic failures and a lack of awareness among fishers themselves
01:24means, in their words, that this is just the tip of an iceberg.
01:28These NGOs have five demands.
01:56Foreign workers in Taiwan's fishing fleet must have the same legal protections as domestic workers.
02:02Wi-Fi must be mandatory, so crew can call for help.
02:05Inspections at sea are needed to check on the crew.
02:08And there's a government push for corporate due diligence
02:11and regular labor ministry meetings with activists to promote workers' rights.
02:15They put these demands into a symbolic gift package for the labor ministry to open and consider.
02:21A ministry rep accepts the package and has this to say.
02:26In response to Taiwan Plus, the fisheries agency said it has a, quote,
02:37zero-tolerance policy for labor exploitation.
02:40It added that a human rights action plan for fishers has been in place since 2022,
02:45and that it's addressing issues like withheld pay and promoting Wi-Fi access on board.
02:49But activists say problems persist in practice.
02:53Taiwan's fishing industry has appeared several times on the U.S. Labor Department's list of goods produced with forced labor.
02:59And just days ago, the EU sent delegates to call for Taiwan to put Wi-Fi on ships
03:04and sign agreements on workers' rights with countries like Indonesia and the Philippines,
03:09the home countries for most of the 20,000 crew members.
03:11Concerns about migrant fishery workers' rights go back years.
03:16NGOs hope the latest controversy will bring a push for real change.
03:20Hank Xu and John Van Trieste in Taipei for Taiwan Plus.

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