
MANILA BULLETIN
After the Department of
Agriculture (DA) suspended the importation of fish, the Department of Trade and
Industry (DTI) announced on Thursday, April 4, that it is closely monitoring
the prices of canned fish products.
The agriculture department
had earlier issued Memorandum Order No. 14 which halts the importation of
frozen galunggong or round scad, tulingan or bonito, and alumahan or mackerel.
Citing reports that such
imports are being diverted to wet markets, the agency has suspended the
issuance of import clearances for such fishery products intended solely for
canning and processing and for institutional buyers catering to the
requirements of hotels and restaurants.
“So far wala naman kaming
naririnig na may risk of supply issue related to sardines and mackerel. We will monitor it very closely,” DTI
Undersecretary for Communications Jose Edgardo “Ed” Sunico said on the
sidelines of the Food Security Cluster Communications Workshop in Nueva Ecija.
The DTI official said the possible
impact of the DA memorandum on the prices of canned fish products will be
tackled during the meeting of the National Price Coordination Council this
month.
“’Yung (The) National
Price Coordination Council will meet this month. As you know, inter-agency 'yan
and the private sector is also part of that council and ang end-goal niyan is
to recommend to the President how to stabilize prices (As you know, that’s
inter-agency and the private sector is also part of that council and ang
end-goal niyan (the end-goal of that) is to recommend to the President how to
stabilize prices),” he said.
However, Sunico did not
confirm or deny if the DTI was consulted by the agriculture department before
issuing the memorandum.
Laurel defends memo
During a televised
briefing on Thursday, April 4, DA Secretary Francisco “Kiko” Tiu Laurel Jr.
noted that canners can still import mackerel, but it would be based on their
Value Added Tax (VAT) sales.
The memorandum stated that
importation of mackerel for canning purposes is allowed “provided that, the
volume thereof shall be based on the vatable sales of the canned product from
the previous year with additional ten percent (10%) of said sales for buffer.”
Should canners redirect
their mackerel imports, Laurel said that they would face a shortage.
“Pero kung ang vat sales
nila says ganito ang kanilang nabentang mackerel at may equivalent tonnage,
they can still import tapos nagdagdag pa nga ako ng 10 percent (But if their
VAT sales says this is the mackerel they sold and has an equivalent tonnage,
they can still import then I even added 10 percent),” the DA chief said.
“Technically, they should
be able to import 10 percent more of what they are using now so I don’t see any
reason kung bakit sila nag-fe-fear na maso-short sila eh (why they fear that
they will fall short),” he went on.
‘Suspension order not
enough’
For the progressive
fishing group Pambansang Lakas ng Kilusang Mamamalakaya ng Pilipinas (Pamalakaya)
said the DA’s suspension of the fish importations is not enough to address the
proliferation of fish products at wet markets.
The agriculture
department, according to the fishers’ group, must hold accountable importers
who blatantly violate importation policy.
“Hindi sapat na ipinatigil
lamang ng Department of Agriculture ang importasyon ng ilang klaseng isda.
Dapat papanagutin ang mga importer na tahasang lumabag sa itinakdang patakaran
sa pag-aangkat (It is not enough for the Department of Agriculture to just
suspend fish importations. Importers violating the import policy must be held
accountable),” the Pamalakaya said.
Laurel earlier said that
the agency will go after importers involved in illegal activities. He said the
DA will not go after wet market vendors, saying there will be no crackdown in
the market level.
Per the DA chief,
approximately 90,000 to 100,000 tons of round scad, mackerel, and bonito are
diverted annually.
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