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World

LA Times
Op-Ed: Is this deadly profession also among the most violent?

Crimes like this don't often happen on land. A 10-minute slow-motion slaughter captured by a cellphone camera shows a group of unarmed men at sea, flailing in the water, shot and killed one by one, after which the culprits pose for celebratory selfies. The only thing more shocking than the footage was the government inaction that followed.

The case shows the challenge of prosecuting crimes on the high seas and the reason violence offshore often occurs with impunity. There were at least four ships at the scene that day, but no law required any of the dozens of witnesses to report the killings — and no one did. Authorities learned of the killings only when the video turned up on a cellphone left in a taxi in Fiji in 2014.

It’s still unclear who the victims were or why they were shot. An unknown number of similar killings take place each year — deckhands on the ship from which the video was shot later said they’d witnessed a similar slaughter a week before.

The number of violent killings — and deaths at sea in general — remain extremely hard to assess. The typical estimate has been 32,000 casualties per year, making commercial fishing among the most dangerous professions on the planet. The new estimate is more than 100,000 fatalities per year — more than 300 a day, according to research produced by the FISH Safety Foundation and funded by the PEW Charitable Trusts.

“Reasons for this significant loss of life include the lack of a comprehensive safety legislative framework and coordinated approaches to promoting safety at sea in the fishing sector,” a report by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations said. But the United Nations, which tracks fatalities by profession, does not indicate how many of these deaths are from avoidable accidents, neglect or violence.

Brutality in distant-water fishing fleets — and the connection to forced labor on these vessels — has been an open secret for a while. A report released in May by the University of Nottingham’s Rights Lab showed, for example, that migrant workers on British fishing ships were systematically overworked and underpaid while more than a third of the workers said they experienced severe physical violence.

In 2020, a team of researchers used the satellite data tracking of about 16,000 fishing ships to estimate how many people were at risk of being subject to forced labor based on criteria defined by the United Nations’ International Labor Organization. Up to a quarter or roughly 100,000 people were at high risk of being victims of forced labor, according to the study published in the journal, PNAS.