You are reading: Regional effort drives stronger labour protection for migrant fishers in tuna supply chains Regional effort drives stronger labour protection for migrant fishers in tuna supply chains
18 June 2026 | Event
Regional effort drives stronger labour protection for migrant fishers in tuna supply chains

4 – 5 June 2026 • Bangkok, Thailand

The Pacific tuna fishery accounts for roughly 60 per cent of global production, but the sector continues to contend with risks of human trafficking and forced labour. To confront these challenges, governments, industry leaders, international organisations, and worker representatives convened for a Regional Workshop on Strengthening Compliance and Addressing Labour Issues in the Fishing Supply Chain.

Jointly organised by the Regional Support Office of the Bali Process (RSO), the International Labour Organization (ILO), and the International Organization for Migration (IOM), the gathering reflected a shared recognition that effective responses to transnational crime call for enhanced cross-sector cooperation and concluded with agreements on a series of practical actions to address labour exploitation across the supply chain.

Collaborative responses to cross-border concerns

The Pacific tuna fishery remains a major source of revenue and employment for Pacific Island countries, including jobs for migrant fishers from Indonesia, the Philippines, and other countries in South and South-East Asia.

However, the sector continues to face risks of labour exploitation and labour rights violations, including forced labour and trafficking in persons. Reported risks include deceptive recruitment, excessive recruitment fees, contract substitution, withholding of wages, retention of identity documents, excessive working hours, hazardous working conditions, weak access to grievance mechanisms and limited integration of labour indicators into fisheries and port inspection systems.

Workshop participants discussed how governments can better regulate recruitment, improve access to remedy and grievance channels, integrate labour-sensitive indicators into vessel inspections and enforcement, and strengthen early detection of exploitation. The discussions also brought together seafood industry actors — including the Seafood Task Force, tuna buyers and vessel operators — to strengthen responsible business conduct, improve recruitment and labour standards, strengthen supply chain due diligence and promote more transparent sourcing practices.

“The fishing sector is central to livelihoods across South-East Asia and the Pacific. Our partnerships with ILO, IOM and other civil society, government, and industry actors are critical to understanding the dynamics within the sector and supporting efforts to combat transnational crime.”, said Fuad Adriansyah, Co-Manager (Indonesia), RSO

“Strengthening compliance in the fishing supply chain requires cooperation across borders, sectors and mandates. Through this workshop, the ILO aims to support practical dialogue and coordinated action to advance fair recruitment, decent work, and stronger labour protection for fishers and migrant workers in the South-East Asia and the Pacific corridor,” said Tuomo Poutiainen, Deputy Regional Director, ILO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific.

“Compliance is not only about rules. It is about dignity, fairness, and building a fishing sector that is safe, sustainable, and just. Our approach must be centred on protection, with migrant workers at the heart of our efforts,” remarked Iori Kato, Regional Director, IOM Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific.

 

Building on regional momentum

In 2024, the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission adopted a binding Conservation and Management Measure on crew labour standards, establishing a regional framework to improve working conditions, prevent labour rights violations and reinforce accountability on fishing vessels. This workshop builds on regional momentum and contributes to broader efforts to promote safe migration and decent work in the blue economy through the EU-funded Ship to Shore Rights South-East Asia programme, implemented by ILO in collaboration with IOM and FAO.

More News Articles
Regional effort drives stronger labour protection for migrant fishers in tuna supply chains
4 – 5 June 2026 • Bangkok, Thailand The Pacific tuna fishery accounts for roughly 60 per cent of global production, but the sec...
18 June 2026
Regional Information, Liaison, and Outreach Network (RILON) Maritime People Smuggling Response Group builds foundations for trusted regional information sharing
30 March – 1 April 2026 • Bangkok, Thailand The establishment of the Regional Information, Liaison and Outreach Network (RILON)...
27 April 2026
New RSO - Australian Institute of Criminology report highlights women’s unique experiences and vulnerabilities in the context of trafficking for forced criminality into cyber-scam centres
Trafficking for forced criminality into cyber-scam centres remains an evolving challenge, both geographically and in complexity, a...
22 April 2026
RSO and Freedom Collaborative bring together civil society, consular officers and immigration officials from across South Asia to address trafficking into cyber-scam centres
23–27 February 2026 • Colombo, Sri Lanka Transnational organised crime networks running cyber-scam centres across Southeast Asi...
25 March 2026
RSO and Freedom Collaborative bring together frontline partners and ASEAN consular officials in Nairobi to strengthen prevention of trafficking for forced criminality into cyber-scam centres
3-6 February 2026 • Nairobi, Kenya Trafficking for forced criminality into cyber-scam centres in Southeast Asia continues at sc...
04 March 2026
Information Sharing and Regional Responses Workshop presents practical solutions to translate dialogue into regional action
29 January 2026 • Bangkok, Thailand 647 people known to have died at sea in Asia’s migration routes over 2024—which also record...
27 February 2026
Addressing migration security and protection through collective action: Insights from the Fourth RSO Constructive Dialogue
27–28 January 2026 • Bangkok, Thailand The movement of people across borders continues to shape regional stability, labour mark...
06 February 2026
RSO, IOM and Freedom Collaborative join forces for a new UK-funded initiative to prevent trafficking for forced criminality into cyber-scam centres
Bangkok, Thailand Cyber-scam centre operations are rapidly expanding across Southeast Asia, forcing millions of individuals int...
23 January 2026