For Japanese fishing town of Nemuro, Moscow holds key to survival
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[April 15, 2022]
By Daniel Leussink
NEMURO, Japan (Reuters) - Japanese
fisherman Tsuruyuki Hansaku was barely out of high school when he served
10 months in a Soviet prison, arrested at sea on his father's boat for
catching cod in what the Russians considered their territory.
The silver-maned resident of the northern Japanese fishing town of
Nemuro, now 79, is still on edge because of the sway Moscow has over the
fortunes of his family fisheries business, and of his hometown.
With Russo-Japanese relations unravelling over the crisis in Ukraine, no
Japanese community has felt the fallout quite like far-flung Nemuro.
The concern this time is the fate of annually held talks between the two
governments to set the quota for Japan to catch salmon and trout born in
the Amur River.
The so-called salmon-trout negotiations date back to 1957 and usually
wrap up by March, leaving plenty of time before the traditional start of
the drift-net fishing season on April 10. The talks have long been
touted as the only diplomatic channel that remained between two nations
even through the testy Cold War era.
This year, they have yet to conclude. Japanese government and industry
insiders say the delay is a demonstration of Moscow's anger over
economic sanctions that Tokyo joined its allies in imposing following
Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Japan's fisheries industry also needs Moscow at the table for three
other annual negotiations that cover products such as kelp and Pacific
saury in some of the world's richest fishing grounds.
"If we can't fish, we can't live here," Hansaku, whose company now
mainly catches and processes Pacific saury, told Reuters at his home
this week.
"It's a matter of survival for us."
The annual drift-net fishing season for salmon and trout within Japan's
exclusive economic zone (EEZ) runs from April to June. Japan needs
Moscow's permission to catch the fish even within its own EEZ because of
a mutual agreement that grants rights to the fish to the country of
origin.
Japanese government ministers had no update on the ongoing talks which
entered the fifth day on Friday.
(GRAPHIC: Japan-Russia talks on fishing for salmon and trout: https://graphics.reuters.com/UKRAINE-CRISIS/JAPAN-RUSSIA/xmvjoqazrpr/fisheries.jpg)
INTERLOCKED HISTORY
The economy of Nemuro, a town of 24,000 at the far-eastern tip of the
island of Hokkaido, is highly dependent on Russia, both for fishing and
because of visits by Russian boats, despite decades of dispute over four
islands in the region.
Following Japan's defeat in World War Two, Moscow took control of the
islands that stretch out from Nemuro in what Tokyo still considers an
illegal occupation. Many former residents of those islands - known as
the Northern Territories in Japan and the Southern Kuriles in Russia -
settled in Nemuro. The territorial spat is the main reason Japan and
Russia have yet to sign a postwar peace treaty.
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Fishermen land scallops at Nemuro Port, in Nemuro on Japan's
northern island of Hokkaido April 12, 2022. Picture taken April 12,
2022. REUTERS/Daniel Leussink
Around town, reminders of Russia are
everywhere: Cyrillic road signs and signboards demanding the return
of the disputed islands. At Nemuro's main Hanasaki port, Russian
boats regularly dock to deliver sea urchins, crab and kelp to local
importers. Before the pandemic, Russian fishermen could be seen
venturing into town to buy TVs and other goods to take home.
Hansaku is the quintessential Nemuro denizen.
He was two in 1945 when his father, returning from the war, moved
his family to Nemuro from Shikotan, one of the islands seized by the
Soviets.
After his jailing at the age of 19, Hansaku took over the family
business as most first-born sons were expected to. The work could be
dangerous: Japanese fishing boats were captured with such regularity
during the Cold War that the Soviets ran a Japanese-only prison on
Sakhalin island that Hansaku said held more than 100 inmates,
including his father and brother, when they were there in the early
1960s.
"It's all part of the tragedy brought on by war," Hansaku said. "We
had to fish to put food on the table and you didn't think about the
dangers involved."
Since the 2016 season, President Vladimir Putin has banned drift-net
fishing for salmon and trout in Russia's EEZ. Because of the reduced
fishing grounds, Nemuro and two neighbouring towns took a $200
million hit the following year, according to an estimate from the
city and a local bank.
"My biggest worry is that all four negotiations will fail," said
Shigeto Hinuma, 71, a local fishmonger who saw revenues fall by 30%
at his central Nemuro store in the wake of Russia's drift-net
fishing ban.
Hansaku, who had taken part in talks for a quarter-century until the
ban - he counts more than 20 trips to Russia - was among those who
gave up salmon-trout fishing altogether.
Now the fishing grounds in the Japanese EEZ are also in danger for
those who are still in the game. Even if an agreement is reached in
the ongoing salmon-trout talks, Hansaku's Pacific saury trade
remains at the mercy of Moscow.
The conditions for this year's fishing for Pacific saury, which
takes place from August, were agreed late last year, but Russia
still needs to issue the permits, Hansaku said. With Japan expelling
several diplomats and ending Russia's most-favoured-nation status
last week, the fate of the permits, as well as the other bilateral
talks, is uncertain.
"For the fisheries trade to disappear is unfathomable," Hansaku
said, adding that the spillover effect would spread to the rest of
Japan.
"If we lose the industry, we'll lose our culture with it. There's no
culture where there is no prosperity."
(Reporting by Daniel Leussink, Additional reporting by Yoshifumi
Takemoto and Nobuhiro Kubo; Editing by Chang-Ran Kim and Raju
Gopalakrishnan)
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