I. Introduction
Illegal fishing in the Philippines is not merely an environmental issue. It is a criminal, administrative, economic, and food-security concern. The Philippines is an archipelagic State whose coastal communities depend heavily on fisheries for livelihood, nutrition, and local commerce. Because of this, Philippine law treats illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing as a serious public offense.
Reporting illegal fishing is both a civic act and, in many situations, a legal duty consistent with the protection of marine resources. A report may lead to inspection, apprehension, seizure of fishing gear or vessels, administrative fines, criminal prosecution, cancellation of licenses, and other sanctions.
This article explains what illegal fishing is, which agencies may receive reports, what information should be included, how evidence should be handled, what happens after a report is filed, and what rights and precautions apply to complainants and witnesses.
II. Governing Laws and Legal Framework
The principal law governing fisheries in the Philippines is the Philippine Fisheries Code of 1998, Republic Act No. 8550, as amended by Republic Act No. 10654. RA 10654 strengthened the law against illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing and introduced heavier penalties, monitoring requirements, and stricter enforcement mechanisms.
Other relevant laws may include:
- The Local Government Code of 1991, which gives local government units authority over municipal waters and local fisheries regulation;
- The Revised Penal Code, where acts involve violence, threats, obstruction, falsification, bribery, or damage to property;
- Environmental laws, including laws on protected areas, wildlife, pollution, and marine conservation;
- Customs, immigration, and maritime laws, especially where foreign vessels or transboundary fishing activities are involved;
- Rules of Criminal Procedure, which govern complaints, preliminary investigation, arrest, search, seizure, and prosecution;
- Local fisheries ordinances, which may regulate fishing seasons, gear, licensing, marine protected areas, fish sanctuaries, and municipal fishing zones.
Because fisheries enforcement is shared among national agencies, local governments, maritime law enforcement units, and community-based enforcers, reporting may be made through several channels.
III. What Counts as Illegal Fishing?
Illegal fishing may refer to any fishing activity done in violation of national law, local ordinance, license conditions, conservation measures, or protected-area rules.
Common examples include:
A. Fishing Without a License, Permit, or Registration
Fishing vessels, gear, operators, and fishers may be required to secure proper registration, licenses, permits, or auxiliary invoices depending on the nature of the activity. Commercial fishing without proper authority may constitute a serious violation.
B. Commercial Fishing in Municipal Waters
Municipal waters generally extend up to fifteen kilometers from the coastline, subject to the legal definition under the Fisheries Code. These waters are primarily reserved for municipal fisherfolk. Commercial fishing in municipal waters is generally prohibited unless allowed under specific lawful conditions, local ordinance, and statutory requirements.
C. Use of Explosives
Blast fishing, dynamite fishing, or fishing through explosives is illegal. It destroys coral reefs, kills juvenile fish, endangers human life, and may also involve separate criminal violations relating to possession or use of explosives.
D. Use of Poisonous or Noxious Substances
Fishing using cyanide, toxic chemicals, poisonous plants, or other harmful substances is prohibited. This is common in destructive live-fish capture and may cause long-term damage to coral ecosystems.
E. Use of Electricity
Electrofishing, or using electric current to catch fish, is generally prohibited because it indiscriminately kills or stuns marine life.
F. Use of Fine-Mesh Nets and Prohibited Gear
The use of fine-mesh nets and other prohibited gear may be illegal, particularly when they catch juvenile fish, damage habitats, or violate gear regulations.
G. Active Gear in Municipal Waters
Certain active fishing gear, such as trawls, Danish seines, modified Danish seines, or similar gear, may be prohibited in municipal waters or in specified areas because of their destructive impact.
H. Fishing in Marine Protected Areas, Fish Sanctuaries, or Closed Areas
Fishing in marine protected areas, sanctuaries, spawning grounds, mangrove areas, seagrass beds, or other restricted zones may be illegal unless expressly allowed by law or regulation.
I. Fishing During Closed Season
The government may declare closed seasons to protect spawning fish or vulnerable stocks. Fishing during a closed season can result in confiscation, fines, prosecution, and license consequences.
J. Catching Protected, Threatened, or Regulated Species
Catching, selling, transporting, or possessing protected marine wildlife, endangered species, or regulated species may violate fisheries and wildlife laws.
K. Foreign Poaching
Foreign fishing vessels operating in Philippine waters without authority may be liable for poaching and related violations. These cases may involve the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, Philippine Coast Guard, Philippine Navy, Philippine National Police Maritime Group, Bureau of Immigration, Bureau of Customs, and prosecutors.
L. Misreporting, Non-Reporting, or Tampering with Monitoring Systems
Commercial fishing operators may be required to comply with vessel monitoring, catch documentation, logbook, reporting, and inspection rules. Misreporting, disabling monitoring devices, falsifying catch data, or refusing inspection may constitute violations.
M. Possession, Transport, or Sale of Illegally Caught Fish
The law may penalize not only the act of catching fish illegally but also possession, dealing, transport, sale, or export of fish caught through unlawful means, particularly where the person knew or should have known of the illegal source.
IV. Who May Report Illegal Fishing?
Any person may report suspected illegal fishing. This includes:
- Municipal fisherfolk;
- Coastal residents;
- Barangay officials;
- Bantay Dagat members;
- Local government employees;
- Boat operators;
- Market vendors;
- Fish port personnel;
- Tour guides and divers;
- Environmental groups;
- Private citizens;
- Vessel crew members or insiders;
- Government employees who observe violations.
A person does not need to be the owner of affected property to report illegal fishing. Fisheries resources are public resources, and their protection is a matter of public interest.
V. Where to Report Illegal Fishing
A report may be made to one or more of the following, depending on urgency, location, and available evidence:
A. Barangay Officials
For incidents close to shore or within a barangay’s coastal area, the barangay may be the fastest reporting point. Barangay officials may coordinate with the municipal agriculture office, Bantay Dagat, police, or local chief executive.
B. Bantay Dagat or Local Fisheries Enforcement Team
Many coastal cities and municipalities have Bantay Dagat units or local fisheries enforcement teams. They may conduct seaborne patrols, verify reports, document violations, and coordinate apprehensions.
C. Municipal or City Agriculture Office
The municipal or city agriculture office often handles fisherfolk registration, local fisheries management, and coordination with local enforcement bodies.
D. Municipal or City Environment and Natural Resources Office
Where the illegal activity involves protected areas, mangroves, marine sanctuaries, coral reefs, pollution, or habitat destruction, the local environment office may be involved.
E. Local Chief Executive
The mayor has important authority over municipal waters, local enforcement, and coordination of local response teams.
F. Philippine National Police Maritime Group
The PNP Maritime Group is a key law enforcement body for maritime and fisheries offenses. Reports involving armed fishers, organized operations, commercial vessels, repeated violations, or dangerous situations may be referred to them.
G. Philippine Coast Guard
The Philippine Coast Guard may respond to maritime incidents, vessel violations, sea safety concerns, and enforcement matters in Philippine waters.
H. Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources
BFAR is the national agency primarily responsible for fisheries regulation and enforcement under the Department of Agriculture. BFAR may receive reports, conduct inspections, coordinate enforcement, support prosecutions, and handle administrative violations.
I. DENR or Protected Area Management Office
If the incident occurs within a protected seascape, marine reserve, protected area, mangrove area, or habitat covered by environmental laws, the DENR or the relevant Protected Area Management Office may be involved.
J. Prosecutor’s Office
A person with sufficient evidence may file a criminal complaint with the Office of the City or Provincial Prosecutor. In practice, reports often first go through law enforcement or fisheries officers, who help prepare the complaint and supporting documents.
K. Courts
Courts become involved once a criminal information is filed, a warrant is sought, search or seizure issues arise, or a case proceeds to trial.
VI. Emergency vs. Non-Emergency Reporting
A. Emergency Situations
A report is urgent when:
- Blast fishing is ongoing;
- Armed persons are involved;
- A vessel is fleeing;
- Foreign fishing is suspected;
- Fishing is occurring inside a protected area;
- There is immediate danger to life;
- Illegal gear is actively being used;
- Evidence may quickly disappear.
In urgent cases, the report should be made immediately to local law enforcement, the Coast Guard, PNP Maritime Group, Bantay Dagat, or the nearest local government authority.
B. Non-Emergency Situations
A non-emergency report may involve repeated patterns, suspicious landings, illegal gear stored onshore, sale of protected species, or documentary violations. These may be reported through a written complaint, affidavit, email, letter, hotline, or in-person report to the appropriate agency.
VII. Information to Include in a Report
A useful illegal fishing report should be factual, specific, and organized. It should include:
- Date and time of the incident;
- Exact location, preferably with GPS coordinates, landmarks, barangay, municipality, and distance from shore;
- Description of the vessel, including name, color, size, markings, registration number, hull number, or flag;
- Number and description of persons involved;
- Type of fishing activity observed;
- Fishing gear used, such as nets, compressor, trawl, Danish seine, spear, explosives, chemicals, lights, or hook-and-line;
- Species involved, if identifiable;
- Photos or videos, if safely taken;
- Direction of travel of the vessel;
- Landing site or buyer, if known;
- Names of witnesses;
- Previous similar incidents, if any;
- Possible violations, if known;
- Your contact information, unless anonymity is necessary for safety.
A report should avoid speculation. It is better to say, “I observed two boats using a net inside the fish sanctuary at around 5:30 a.m.” than to say, “They are criminals destroying the sea,” unless the facts are clearly stated.
VIII. Evidence That May Help
The following evidence may support enforcement or prosecution:
- Photographs of the vessel, gear, catch, location, or persons involved;
- Videos showing the actual fishing activity;
- GPS coordinates or map screenshots;
- Witness statements;
- Boat markings, vessel names, or registration numbers;
- Confiscated gear, if lawfully seized by authorities;
- Fish samples or catch documentation;
- Market receipts, transport documents, or auxiliary invoices;
- Patrol reports;
- Barangay blotter entries;
- Incident reports by Bantay Dagat or law enforcement;
- Expert certification, laboratory results, or inspection reports where chemicals, explosives, or protected species are involved.
Private citizens should not endanger themselves to obtain evidence. A distant photo, a time-stamped video, or a detailed written account may be enough to trigger official action.
IX. How to Write a Complaint or Incident Report
A written report may follow this structure:
Subject: Report of Suspected Illegal Fishing
I. Complainant/Reporter: Name, address, contact number, and affiliation, if any.
II. Date, Time, and Place of Incident: State when and where the incident occurred.
III. Persons or Vessels Involved: Describe the vessel, crew, markings, and identifying features.
IV. Facts Observed: Narrate only what was personally seen, heard, photographed, recorded, or reliably reported.
V. Evidence Available: List photos, videos, witnesses, coordinates, documents, or other proof.
VI. Action Requested: Request investigation, patrol, apprehension, inspection, filing of charges, or protection of witnesses.
VII. Certification: State that the report is true and correct based on personal knowledge or available information.
A report may later be converted into a sworn affidavit if required for prosecution.
X. Sample Incident Report
Report of Suspected Illegal Fishing
I, Juan Dela Cruz, of Barangay San Isidro, Municipality of ___, Province of ___, respectfully report a suspected illegal fishing incident.
On 15 May 2026, at around 4:45 a.m., I observed a blue-and-white motorized fishing vessel approximately 12 meters long operating near the municipal fish sanctuary of Barangay San Isidro. The vessel appeared to be using a large net within the marked sanctuary area. I saw at least four persons on board. The vessel had the marking “MB ___” on its side, although I could not read the full registration number because of the distance.
I took two photographs and one short video from the shoreline. The approximate location was near the eastern boundary buoy of the sanctuary, about ___ meters from the coast. Other residents, namely ___ and ___, also saw the incident.
I respectfully request that the appropriate authorities investigate this matter, conduct patrol or verification, and take legal action if warranted.
Signed: Juan Dela Cruz Date: ___ Contact Number: ___
XI. Anonymous Reporting
A person may wish to report anonymously due to fear of retaliation. Anonymous reports may still be useful for intelligence, patrol planning, and verification. However, prosecution may be stronger if at least one witness is willing to execute an affidavit or testify.
If safety is a concern, the reporter may:
- Ask the receiving office to keep identity confidential;
- Report through a trusted barangay official or local enforcement officer;
- Provide evidence without public exposure;
- Request police assistance;
- Avoid confronting the suspected violators;
- Avoid posting accusations on social media before official action.
Anonymous reporting is better than silence, but documented and verifiable reporting is usually more effective.
XII. Safety Precautions for Reporters
Illegal fishing may involve organized groups, armed persons, or financially powerful operators. Reporters should observe the following precautions:
- Do not confront suspected illegal fishers at sea;
- Do not board a vessel;
- Do not seize gear or catch unless lawfully authorized;
- Do not trespass to obtain evidence;
- Do not provoke or threaten suspects;
- Do not publish unverified accusations online;
- Keep copies of evidence in a secure location;
- Report immediately if threatened;
- Coordinate with official enforcement bodies;
- Prioritize personal safety over documentation.
A citizen’s role is usually to observe, document, and report. Enforcement should be left to authorized officers.
XIII. Role of Bantay Dagat and Deputized Fish Wardens
Bantay Dagat members, fish wardens, and other deputized enforcement personnel may assist in monitoring, reporting, patrols, and apprehensions. Their authority depends on proper deputation, local ordinances, training, and coordination with law enforcement agencies.
They may help:
- Verify reports;
- Conduct patrols;
- Record incidents;
- Identify vessels and gear;
- Coordinate with police, Coast Guard, BFAR, or LGU officials;
- Preserve evidence;
- Serve as witnesses.
However, their actions must comply with due process, safety rules, and the limits of their legal authority.
XIV. What Happens After a Report Is Filed?
The usual process may involve the following steps:
A. Receipt and Recording
The receiving office records the complaint, incident report, blotter entry, hotline report, or referral.
B. Verification
Authorities may verify the location, interview witnesses, review photos or videos, conduct patrols, or inspect landing sites.
C. Apprehension or Inspection
If the violation is ongoing or evidence is sufficient, authorized officers may inspect vessels, gear, catch, licenses, permits, logbooks, and monitoring devices.
D. Seizure of Evidence
Illegal gear, catch, vessels, explosives, chemicals, or documents may be seized in accordance with law. Proper inventory and chain of custody are important.
E. Administrative Proceedings
BFAR, LGUs, or other agencies may impose administrative sanctions such as fines, suspension, cancellation of license, blacklisting, or confiscation, depending on the violation.
F. Criminal Complaint
If facts support a criminal offense, a complaint may be filed with the prosecutor. Witness affidavits, apprehension reports, photographs, videos, inspection reports, and expert certifications may be attached.
G. Preliminary Investigation
For offenses requiring preliminary investigation, the prosecutor determines whether probable cause exists. The respondent may be required to submit a counter-affidavit.
H. Filing in Court
If probable cause is found, the prosecutor files an information in court. The case proceeds to arraignment, pre-trial, trial, and judgment.
I. Confiscation, Forfeiture, and Penalties
Depending on the offense, the court or administrative authority may impose fines, imprisonment, forfeiture of catch, gear, equipment, or vessels, and cancellation of licenses.
XV. Administrative, Civil, and Criminal Liability
Illegal fishing may result in several kinds of liability.
A. Administrative Liability
Administrative penalties may include:
- Fines;
- Suspension of permit or license;
- Cancellation of license;
- Disqualification from future permits;
- Confiscation of catch or gear;
- Blacklisting of vessel or operator;
- Other regulatory sanctions.
Administrative cases usually require substantial evidence, which is a lower evidentiary threshold than proof beyond reasonable doubt.
B. Criminal Liability
Criminal prosecution may result in imprisonment, fines, forfeiture, and a criminal record. Proof beyond reasonable doubt is required for conviction.
C. Civil Liability
Persons responsible for illegal fishing may also be liable for damages, restoration costs, or compensation where injury to persons, property, livelihood, or ecosystems is proven.
XVI. Special Concern: Blast Fishing
Blast fishing is among the most destructive forms of illegal fishing. It may involve multiple violations:
- Illegal fishing under fisheries law;
- Illegal possession or use of explosives;
- Damage to coral reefs and marine habitats;
- Physical injury or homicide if persons are harmed;
- Public safety offenses.
Reports of blast fishing should be treated as urgent. The report should include the time of explosion, number of blasts heard, location, visible vessels, direction of travel, and any injuries or fish kills observed.
XVII. Special Concern: Cyanide and Poison Fishing
Cyanide fishing and other poison-based methods may be harder to detect because the evidence can dissipate. Useful evidence includes:
- Video of divers or fishers using squeeze bottles or chemical containers;
- Dead or stunned fish;
- Damaged coral;
- Containers or residue;
- Testimony of witnesses;
- Laboratory testing, if available;
- Records of live-fish trade or aquarium-fish collection.
Authorities should be informed quickly so samples and evidence may be preserved.
XVIII. Special Concern: Commercial Vessels in Municipal Waters
Reports involving commercial fishing vessels should include:
- Vessel name and markings;
- Estimated size or tonnage;
- Gear used;
- Distance from shore;
- GPS coordinates;
- Time and date;
- Whether lights, nets, trawls, or purse seines were used;
- Photos or video showing location and vessel activity.
Municipal waters are particularly sensitive because they are intended to protect small-scale fisherfolk and nearshore ecosystems.
XIX. Special Concern: Fishing in Marine Protected Areas
Fishing in a marine protected area, fish sanctuary, or no-take zone may violate local ordinances, protected-area rules, and national laws. Reports should identify:
- Name of the protected area;
- Boundary markers or buoys;
- Exact location of the activity;
- Type of fishing observed;
- Whether the activity occurred inside a no-take zone;
- Identity of the managing authority;
- Photos, videos, or coordinates.
Marine protected area violations should be reported to the LGU, Bantay Dagat, protected area office, DENR where applicable, and law enforcement.
XX. Special Concern: Sale of Protected or Illegally Caught Species
Illegal fishing reports may arise not at sea but in markets, ports, restaurants, online listings, or transport checkpoints. Examples include sale of protected species, undersized fish, wildlife, or fish suspected to have been caught by illegal methods.
A report should include:
- Name and address of the market, store, port, restaurant, or seller;
- Date and time observed;
- Species involved;
- Quantity;
- Photos;
- Price tags, receipts, or online screenshots;
- Delivery or transport details;
- Names of persons involved, if known.
Care should be taken not to make defamatory public accusations before verification.
XXI. Filing a Barangay Blotter or Police Report
A barangay blotter or police report may help establish the date, time, and substance of the complaint. It is useful where:
- The incident is recurring;
- The reporter has been threatened;
- The suspects are known locally;
- Witnesses need documentation;
- Authorities need an official record before patrol or referral.
The blotter is not the same as a criminal conviction. It is only an official record of a report or incident.
XXII. Preparing a Sworn Affidavit
For prosecution, a witness may be asked to execute a sworn affidavit. The affidavit should state:
- The witness’s identity and capacity to observe;
- The date, time, and place of the incident;
- What the witness personally saw, heard, recorded, or photographed;
- Identification of suspects, if possible;
- Description of vessel, gear, and catch;
- Attached evidence;
- Statement that the affidavit is voluntarily executed;
- Signature before an authorized officer or notary, when required.
Affidavits should be truthful and based on personal knowledge. False statements may expose the affiant to liability.
XXIII. Preservation of Evidence
Evidence should be preserved carefully. The reporter should:
- Keep original photos and videos;
- Avoid editing or altering files;
- Save metadata where possible;
- Back up files securely;
- Record the date, time, and location;
- Identify who took the photo or video;
- Avoid forwarding files repeatedly if metadata may be lost;
- Provide copies to authorities while retaining originals;
- Label files clearly;
- Keep a written timeline of events.
For physical evidence such as gear, fish, containers, or explosives, private citizens should not handle dangerous items. Authorities should secure and document them.
XXIV. Chain of Custody
Chain of custody refers to the documented handling of evidence from seizure or collection until presentation in court or administrative proceedings. Although most citizens are not expected to manage formal chain of custody, they can help by:
- Stating who captured the photo or video;
- Preserving the original file;
- Recording when and where it was captured;
- Avoiding manipulation;
- Turning over evidence to authorities with written acknowledgment where possible.
Poor evidence handling can weaken a case.
XXV. Rights of Persons Accused
A report is not a conviction. Persons accused of illegal fishing have rights, including:
- The right to due process;
- The right to be informed of accusations;
- The right against unreasonable searches and seizures;
- The right to counsel in criminal proceedings;
- The right to present evidence;
- The presumption of innocence in criminal cases;
- The right to challenge administrative penalties.
Reports should therefore be accurate, fair, and supported by facts.
XXVI. Avoiding Defamation and Unlawful Online Accusations
Posting photos or names of suspected illegal fishers on social media may create legal risk if the accusation is false, exaggerated, or malicious. It may also alert suspects and compromise enforcement.
A safer approach is to submit evidence directly to authorized agencies. Public awareness campaigns may be useful, but specific accusations should be handled carefully.
XXVII. Protection Against Retaliation
Reporters and witnesses may face intimidation. Threats, harassment, physical harm, coercion, or bribery should be separately reported to police or prosecutors. If threats are serious, the witness may ask authorities about available protection measures.
Local officials, law enforcement officers, and prosecutors should treat retaliation as a serious concern because fear of retaliation often prevents communities from reporting environmental crimes.
XXVIII. Reporting Government Inaction or Corruption
If a report is ignored, mishandled, or compromised, the complainant may consider escalating to:
- Higher local government officials;
- BFAR regional office;
- PNP Maritime Group;
- Philippine Coast Guard;
- DENR, if protected areas or habitat destruction are involved;
- Office of the Ombudsman, if public officials are allegedly involved in corruption or neglect of duty;
- Civil society organizations, where appropriate;
- Prosecutor’s office, if evidence supports criminal action.
When alleging corruption, the report should be specific and evidence-based. Examples include refusal to act despite repeated reports, release of seized gear without authority, warning violators before patrols, or accepting money or favors.
XXIX. Role of Local Ordinances
Local governments may enact fisheries ordinances regulating:
- Municipal fishing permits;
- Fish sanctuaries;
- Closed seasons;
- Gear restrictions;
- Zoning;
- Market rules;
- Fish landing areas;
- Bantay Dagat operations;
- Penalties for local violations.
Because local ordinances vary, a report should identify not only the national violation but also the possible local rule violated. The municipal agriculture office, Sangguniang Bayan or Panlungsod, or local legal office may provide copies of relevant ordinances.
XXX. Foreign Fishing Vessels
Suspected foreign fishing activity should be reported immediately. Important details include:
- Vessel name;
- Flag or markings;
- GPS coordinates;
- Number of vessels;
- Activity observed;
- Direction of travel;
- Photos or videos;
- Time and date;
- Whether Philippine vessels or communities were threatened.
Foreign vessel cases may involve fisheries law, maritime law, national security, customs, immigration, and diplomatic considerations. Citizens should not approach foreign vessels.
XXXI. Illegal Fishing and Human Rights
Fisheries enforcement must comply with human rights standards. Even when illegal fishing is suspected, enforcement officers should avoid excessive force, unlawful detention, extortion, discrimination, or abusive treatment. At the same time, communities have a right to protection from environmental destruction, livelihood loss, and unsafe waters.
A legally sound enforcement system protects both marine resources and the rights of all persons involved.
XXXII. Practical Reporting Checklist
Before reporting, gather the following if safely possible:
- Date and time;
- Exact location or GPS coordinates;
- Photos or videos;
- Vessel name, color, size, and markings;
- Number of persons involved;
- Type of fishing gear;
- Species or catch involved;
- Direction of travel;
- Witness names;
- Prior incidents;
- Possible landing site;
- Any threats or violence;
- Your contact details or request for confidentiality.
XXXIII. Template: Written Complaint
[Date]
To: [Name of Office or Agency] [Address]
Subject: Report of Suspected Illegal Fishing
I respectfully report a suspected illegal fishing incident that occurred on [date] at around [time] in [location].
I observed the following facts:
- [Describe the vessel, persons, gear, and activity.]
- [State the exact location or coordinates.]
- [Describe why the activity appears illegal, such as fishing inside a sanctuary, use of prohibited gear, commercial fishing within municipal waters, blast fishing, or fishing during closed season.]
- [Identify witnesses, if any.]
- [List attached photos, videos, or documents.]
I respectfully request that your office investigate this matter, conduct appropriate enforcement action, preserve evidence, and file the necessary administrative or criminal charges if warranted.
I am willing to cooperate as a witness, subject to appropriate safety and confidentiality measures.
Respectfully submitted,
[Name] [Address] [Contact Number] [Signature]
XXXIV. Template: Affidavit of Witness
Republic of the Philippines [Province/City/Municipality]
AFFIDAVIT
I, [Name], of legal age, Filipino, and residing at [address], after being duly sworn, state:
- That on [date], at around [time], I was at [place];
- That from my location, I personally saw [describe vessel/persons/activity];
- That the incident occurred at or near [specific location/GPS coordinates/landmark];
- That the persons involved were using [describe gear or method];
- That the activity appeared to be illegal because [state basis, such as fish sanctuary, municipal waters, closed season, prohibited gear, explosives, poison, or lack of permit if known];
- That I took [photos/videos] of the incident, attached as Annexes “A,” “B,” and “C”;
- That [name of other witness], if any, also saw the incident;
- That I execute this affidavit to attest to the truth of the foregoing and to support the investigation and filing of appropriate charges.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have signed this affidavit this ___ day of ___ 20__ at ___, Philippines.
[Signature] [Name]
SUBSCRIBED AND SWORN to before me this ___ day of ___ 20__.
XXXV. Common Mistakes When Reporting Illegal Fishing
Reports are often weakened by the following mistakes:
- Reporting too late;
- Failing to include exact location;
- Taking unclear photos without vessel markings;
- Making accusations without facts;
- Posting online before reporting to authorities;
- Losing original files;
- Failing to identify witnesses;
- Confronting suspects and escalating danger;
- Not following up with the receiving office;
- Confusing hearsay with personal observation.
A strong report is specific, timely, factual, and supported by evidence.
XXXVI. Follow-Up After Reporting
After filing a report, the complainant may:
- Ask for a receiving copy or reference number;
- Record the name of the receiving officer;
- Ask which office will handle the investigation;
- Submit additional evidence;
- Follow up in writing;
- Ask whether an affidavit is needed;
- Request confidentiality if necessary;
- Coordinate with witnesses;
- Monitor whether illegal activity continues;
- Escalate if no action is taken.
Follow-up should be firm but professional.
XXXVII. Legal Importance of Community Reporting
Illegal fishing is difficult to detect because violations often occur at sea, at night, or in remote areas. Government patrols are limited. Community reporting is therefore essential.
Local fisherfolk and coastal residents often know:
- Which vessels operate in the area;
- Which gear is normally used;
- Which areas are protected;
- When suspicious activity occurs;
- Where illegal catch is landed;
- Who repeatedly violates the rules.
Community knowledge, when properly documented, can become powerful legal evidence.
XXXVIII. Conclusion
Reporting illegal fishing in the Philippines requires speed, accuracy, caution, and coordination. The most effective report states what happened, where it happened, when it happened, who was involved, what gear or method was used, and what evidence exists.
The proper reporting channel may be the barangay, Bantay Dagat, local agriculture office, mayor’s office, PNP Maritime Group, Philippine Coast Guard, BFAR, DENR, protected area office, or prosecutor’s office, depending on the facts.
Citizens should not place themselves in danger or take enforcement into their own hands. Their strongest contribution is to observe safely, document carefully, report promptly, preserve evidence, and cooperate truthfully with lawful authorities.
Illegal fishing harms marine ecosystems, fisherfolk livelihoods, food security, and the rule of law. A well-prepared report can help stop destructive practices, hold violators accountable, and protect Philippine waters for future generations.