Numerous species of sharks — a few of that are endangered, whereas others are listed as weak — are hauled on shore at daybreak on the Tanjung Luar port on June 9, 2025, in East Lombok, Indonesia. Tanjung Luar is among the largest shark markets in Indonesia and Southeast Asia, from the place shark fins are exported to different Asian markets — primarily Hong Kong and China — and their bones are utilized in beauty merchandise additionally offered to China.
Nicole Tung/Fondation Carmignac
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“We have been preventing over who had caught extra fish, after which I noticed my crewmate pushed overboard by the captain,” Akbar Fitrian, 29, an Indonesian crewmember says as he recounts an incident aboard a Chinese language-owned fishing vessel in 2022. “The ship then began to drive away as my crewmate tried to swim in the direction of us. After which I do not know what occurred. The captain by no means reported the incident.”
The seas of Southeast Asia — dwelling to a few of the richest in biodiversity on this planet — have lengthy been in decline. For the reason that Fifties, the Middle for Strategic and Worldwide Research estimates that 70-95% of fish shares have been depleted and are susceptible to collapse, perpetuated by the rise of industrial-scale fishing, a lot of which is illegitimate. Authorized overfishing is one other issue, and each are propped up by weak laws, inadequate monitoring and insatiable demand. Roughly half of the world’s international marine fish catch comes from the seas of Southeast Asia, in line with the U.N., and it comes at a calamitous price.
In the US, roughly 50% of the imported seafood comes from Asia, with practically $6.3 billion in commerce coming from China, Vietnam, Indonesia and India alone, in line with the U.S. Nationwide Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Behind the illicit seafood commerce is an opaque world standing on the crossroads of intertwining points. There’s the legacy of brutal human rights violations which have enabled sea slavery to develop into the norm. These concerned within the efforts of organizations just like the worldwide Freedom Fund and Thailand’s Labour Safety Community, which work to finish modern-day slavery within the area, say many staff are murdered at sea, abused and sometimes introduced right into a cycle of debt bondage.
There’s the lawless nature of the seas, which has emboldened traffickers to take advantage of determined fishermen and impoverished informal laborers. Then there are the geopolitical elements at play: In a race to dominate the seas, China and, to a lesser extent, Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan and Malaysia have all constructed outposts and bases on shoals, reefs and atolls. Fishing fleets — of which China has the biggest on this planet — are quick changing into extra militarized in consequence.
All of this has imposed a heavy price on distinctive ecosystems and led to devastating socioeconomic impacts on artisanal and small-scale fishers.
Three international locations illustrate the intersectional nature of overfishing:
Thailand
Fishing vessels are seen docked collectively at a touchdown web site in Chumphon, Thailand, on Jan. 22, 2025.
Nicole Tung/Fondation Carmignac
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“Fish have been in abundance earlier than,” says Mimit Hantele, 53, a member of the Urak Lawoi tribe on the island of Koh Lipe in Thailand. “However now, the fishing season is so much shorter, the number of fish is much fewer, and I promote much less. So I take vacationers out on scuba expeditions to earn cash.”
For generations, the Urak Lawoi plied the wealthy waters round them for sustenance. Sea gypsies in a time previous, the villagers advanced to rely solely on what they might catch and used easy fishing gear forged from small wood boats.
Then, within the Seventies, got here the large Thai and Malaysian fishing boats. Fishermen on Koh Lipe say the boats fish illegally across the island, showing solely at evening to flee detection and in a protected nationwide forest space. The ships use purse seiner nets and demersal trawlers, destroying the coral beneath and, consequently, the habitat for fish. Such overexploitation has led the Indigenous group to show to tourism to make up for misplaced revenue and declining fish shares. “Fishing is in our blood,” Hantele mentioned, however “our lifestyle has modified. We will not rely solely on the fish.”
Frozen Spanish mackerel and different species of fish in chilly storage in Samut Sakhon, Thailand, on Jan. 15, 2025.
Nicole Tung/Fondation Carmignac
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Fishermen mend nets in Samut Sakhon, Thailand, on Jan. 15, 2025.
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Small-scale artisanal fishermen shake sardines from nets to assemble them en masse after returning to shore with their catch, within the Gulf of Thailand, off the coast of Prachuap, Thailand, on Jan. 20, 2025.
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Based on a 2001 report from the U.N., roughly 80% of fishers in Southeast Asia on the time have been small-scale or artisanal, counting on conventional practices. Nonetheless, declining nearshore fish shares have pressured many artisanal fishers to enterprise farther from shore looking for commercially worthwhile species. Added to which might be authorities subsidies for gas and tax breaks for business fishing vessels, which have propped up the seafood trade. Speedy development in maritime know-how has made fleets far simpler at discovering wealthy searching grounds whereas avoiding detection by switching off their monitoring techniques.
Nicole Tung/Fondation Carmignac
A seafood service provider shows dried seahorses on the market in Chumphon, Thailand, on Jan. 22, 2025. Dozens of nations world wide are concerned within the dried seahorse commerce, with Thailand, the Philippines, Vietnam and India being the biggest exporters. Because the commerce of seahorses, that are sometimes used for conventional medicines, has sharply elevated, the seahorse catch has declined over time. Seahorses are among the many species protected beneath the Conference on Worldwide Commerce in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora.
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Lax laws on probably the most harmful sorts of fishing, notably demersal trawling and cyanide fishing, the seize of juvenile fish that forestalls the replenishment of shares, the poor oversight of labor legal guidelines and the exploitation of staff determined to earn a dwelling have all contributed to the devastating knock-on results for communities alongside coastlines and the possibly irreversible environmental penalties.
Members of a crew engaged on a Thai fishing vessel, most of whom are from Myanmar, put together to point out their paperwork to Port In Port Out (PIPO) inspectors in Chumphon, Thailand, on Jan. 22, 2025. PIPO inspection facilities have been arrange in 2018, following an outcry within the worldwide group over Thailand’s gross human rights abuses in its fishing trade.
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A Burmese dock employee types fish after a catch from a Thai vessel was unloaded in Ranong, Thailand, on Jan. 23, 2025.
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In Thailand final 12 months, artisanal fishermen held protests over the rollback of main fisheries reforms applied a decade in the past that had helped to rebuild fish shares in Thai waters. Thai companies, which personal a major share of economic fishing vessels, pushed the federal government to decontrol the fishing trade to extend their income. Protestors targeted on their issues that enjoyable the principles would revive unlawful, unreported and unregulated fishing and result in elevated overfishing. The rollbacks, they argued, would scale back transparency and accountability throughout the trade and scale back checks on gear and labor. Much less transparency would result in much less data about what’s left within the sea. In flip, sustainability decreases, hurting artisanal fishers who depend upon the ocean for sustenance and livelihoods.
The Philippines
Filipino fishermen unload Yellowfin tuna, Bigeye tuna and blue marlin at a fish port in Normal Santos, the Philippines, on Might 21, 2025.
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The primary time Donald Carmen was harassed by Chinese language boats off the coast of Palawan was in December 2024. The next February, they harassed him and one other fisherman once more, getting shut sufficient to hit their outriggers. “They pressured us to maneuver away and recorded us with cell telephones and cameras. I’ve been fishing on this space since 2016, and again then, everybody was free to fish. I might catch 400-500 kilograms of fish in an evening, about 60 nautical miles offshore. Now, as a result of I do not dare enterprise out as far, I am fortunate if I catch 200-300 kilograms over three days,” Carmen mentioned as he steered his banca simply weeks later, looking out for Chinese language fishing boats and militia.
A drone shot of the shoreline in Rizal, Palawan, the Philippines, on Might 28, 2025. Many fishermen right here have misplaced greater than half their incomes due to harassment by Chinese language ships, limiting the distances they’ll exit to sea to fish for particular species.
Nicole Tung/Fondation Carmignac
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Vincent Gehisan, 36, enjoys a meal at his dwelling in Quezon, Palawan, the Philippines, on Might 24, 2025. Gehisan was hassled and detained for practically a day at sea by Chinese language Coast Guard and navy ships whereas out on a resupply mission the 12 months earlier than and now says he is afraid to enterprise removed from Filipino shores to fish.
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Individuals sing karaoke on Might 21, 2025, at an area bar close to the primary fish port advanced in Normal Santos, the Philippines, the place the clientele are primarily fishermen on their days off.
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Unlawful, unreported and unregulated fishing is inextricably linked to the geopolitical wrestle for maritime dominance within the South China Sea. Over the previous twenty years, China has quickly scaled up its fishing militias in a race to claim management over an unlimited space whereas attempting to satisfy the nation’s insatiable demand for seafood. Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia and Taiwan have adopted go well with on a a lot smaller scale.
The South China Sea — or the East Sea, as Vietnam calls it, and the West Philippine Sea, because it’s identified within the Philippines — is among the world’s most strategic waterways. China’s use of its fishing fleet to manage commerce routes and dominate territory to create maritime buffer zones threatens the meals safety and livelihoods of fishers within the area.
Relations of Filipino fishermen place bait on fishing strains in Quezon, Palawan, the Philippines, on Might 24, 2025.
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Small-scale Filipino fishermen unload their catch a fish port in Normal Santos, the Philippines, on Might 22, 2025. The town is called the Philippines’ tuna capital and hub for tuna fishing and merchandise exports.
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Whereas Chinese language aggression has endured for years in areas off Zambales, a province of the Philippines, it has solely not too long ago affected waters off the coast of Rizal in Palawan, as China is believed to be increase its presence within the Sabina and Bombay shoals, a lot nearer to the Filipino coast — encroaching on the Philippines’ declare to the Kalayaan Island Group — from its authentic areas of declare just like the Spratly Islands and the Scarborough Shoal. Amongst a few of the techniques utilized by Chinese language fishing militias to discourage fishermen are water cannons, utilizing swarming and encircling strategies, military-grade lasers and ramming fishing boats to intimidate and drive them from fishing grounds.
As international locations within the area militarize their fishing fleets, the price will in the end be detrimental to ecological sustainability and geopolitical stability.
Indonesia
Indonesian fishermen unload varied species, together with sharks and wedgefish, that are one of the crucial threatened, in Tegal, Indonesia, on June 13, 2025.
Nicole Tung/Fondation Carmignac
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In Indonesia, poverty, lack of alternatives and desperation have pushed hundreds of Indonesian males into trafficking circles, whereas others are lured by the guarantees of a well-paid job within the development or service industries earlier than being put aboard a fishing vessel unbeknownst to them. Patima Tungpuchayakul, the founding father of Thailand’s Labour Safety Community, says a whole bunch of fishermen go lacking from business vessels annually, and plenty of extra are brutalized whereas dealing with appalling circumstances and inhumane, unsanitary circumstances on board, usually on the mercy of the captain or the ship’s homeowners.
Fishmongers collect to promote the catch introduced in at daybreak by fishermen on the Tanjung Luar port on June 9, 2025, in East Lombok, Indonesia.
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A drone picture of the biggest business fish port in Indonesia, Muara Angke, the place a whole bunch of economic fishing vessels are docked, in Jakarta, Indonesia, on June 15, 2025.
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A fisherman poses for a photograph in Pemalang, Indonesia, on June 13, 2025. Each Tegal and Pemalang are generally known as hubs for recruiting laborers who then work on business fishing vessels for Chinese language, Taiwanese and Korean firms.
Nicole Tung/Fondation Carmignac
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Nicole Tung/Fondation Carmignac
Southeast Asia continues to be a hub for slave labor, primarily in Thailand and Indonesia, the place the seafood commerce contributes a lot of the tuna, shrimp and trash fish used for fishmeal to the availability chains of main retailers and pet meals manufacturers within the U.S. and Europe.
“There’s now much less bodily violence and coercion — however coercion is now extra debt-based,” says Rosia Wongsuban, a program advisor on the Freedom Fund, a nonprofit working to finish modern-day slavery. “Working circumstances are the identical. Due to a labor scarcity, there aren’t sufficient staff to function on vessels, after which the crew must take the additional burden.”
“In an effort to work on the fishing vessel, which was Chinese language-owned, I used to be given a mortgage of 4 million Rupiah,” Akbar Fitrian, 29, a fisherman interviewed in Jakarta, explains. “1 million went to paying for fishing gear, after which I needed to work till I paid again the opposite 3 million. Generally, I needed to hold borrowing extra to proceed working to repay the preliminary mortgage. Generally I might solely find yourself with sufficient wage to purchase cigarettes. Generally I went into the pink.”
Anis Khuprotin, 28, rests her head on the gravesite of her husband, Muhamad Nur, in Tegal, Indonesia, on June 13, 2025. Anis’ husband died on board a business fishing vessel after a chunk of kit got here unfastened and struck him within the head. Employees from the recruiting company the employed her husband instructed her he died of a coronary heart assault as a substitute of admitting the reality in an try and keep away from paying insurance coverage charges to the household.
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Indra, 28, who declined to offer his final title out of concern for his security, clothes as a clown and performs music to earn some extra cash in his neighborhood in Jakarta, Indonesia, on June 14, 2025. Indra, who beforehand labored on a business fishing vessel, recounted harrowing experiences at sea, the place he mentioned he witnessed abuses of his fellow cremates. Since returning dwelling, he is refused to join one other job on a business fishing vessel, however says he has restricted alternatives owing to the shortage of a faculty diploma. He at the moment works in a warehouse, packing packing containers, and clothes as a clown to earn additional revenue.
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Fishermen play a card recreation on June 10, 2025, on Maringkik Island, off the caost of East Lombok, Indonesia.
Nicole Tung/Fondation Carmignac
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However decline will not be inevitable. With stronger regional cooperation, clear provide chains, company accountability and knowledgeable client selections, Southeast Asia can reclaim stewardship over its waters. The survival of its fisheries — and of the communities that depend upon them — hinges on selections being made now, removed from shore.
Numerous species of sharks — a few of that are endangered whereas others are listed as weak — are hauled on shore at daybreak by business fishermen on the Tanjung Luar port on June 10, 2025, in East Lombok, Indonesia.
Nicole Tung/Fondation Carmignac
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Nicole Tung/Fondation Carmignac
This physique of labor, primarily based on a nine-month-long investigation supported by the Fondation Carmignac, is on exhibit on the Bronx Documentary Middle by way of April 26.
Nicole Tung is a photojournalist working primarily within the Center East and Asia. You possibly can see extra of her work on her web site, NicoleTung.com, or on Instagram, at @nicoletung.

