「辽宁营口政府随意停航镇压渔民,渔民称“共产党不让老百姓活”(2025.11.15)」11月15日,辽宁省营口市盖州市北海村,渔民们因反对当地政府出台的“一刀切”渔船停航整改政策,而遭到警察镇压。现场视频显示,至少有4名渔民被抓走。
据当地网友透露, 由于近期的几起渔船事故,营口市政府出台了一项覆盖全市的渔船安全整改政策,要求所有渔船一律停航并进行检查与整改,这种“一刀切”的做法,立刻引发了渔民们的强烈不满。
渔民们表示,一艘渔船往往动辄数百万元,加之每年的人工、补给及网具更新等开支,经济压力巨大,许多人因此负债累累。停航对渔民而言意味着直接的经济损失,甚至关系到生计。而在整改过程中,执法人员却随意罚款,金额动辄数万元,令他们苦不堪言。此外,在当前各行各业都在裁员的背景下,渔政部门却在大量招聘新人执行整改,正式编制人员很少参与。关于渔船合规的标准,官方并无统一规定,世代捕鱼为生的渔民也一头雾水,更不用说新来的安检人员。大量使用新人,使得整改在执行中充斥着各种随意性和不确定性。渔民还质疑,为何如此大规模的整改不安排在休渔期,而偏偏选择在捕鱼季进行,完全不顾渔民死活。
不光抗议的村民遭到了镇压,渔民们在网络上的言论也受到严密监控,发布的相关信息通常会被迅速删除,一些渔民甚至收到了警察的警告。 对此,一名渔民愤怒地表示:“这就是中国共产党,不让老百姓活呀“
Liaoning Yingkou Government Arbitrarily Halts Fishing, Suppresses Fishermen; Fishermen Say “The Communist Party Won’t Let People Live” (Nov 15, 2025)
On November 15, in Beihai Village, Gaizhou City, Yingkou, Liaoning Province, fishermen protesting the local government’s “one-size-fits-all” fishing ban and vessel inspection policy were suppressed by police. Videos show that at least four fishermen were taken away.
According to local netizens, following several recent fishing accidents, Yingkou City launched a city-wide fishing safety inspection policy, requiring all vessels to stop fishing for inspection and correction. This “one-size-fits-all” approach immediately triggered strong anger among fishermen.
Fishermen said that a single vessel can cost millions of yuan, and annual expenses for labor, supplies, and nets create enormous financial pressure. Many are heavily in debt. A fishing ban means direct economic losses, even threatening their livelihoods. During the inspection process, enforcement officers arbitrarily fined fishermen, sometimes tens of thousands of yuan, causing great hardship.
Meanwhile, amid widespread layoffs in other industries, the fisheries department hired many new staff to carry out inspections, with few permanent officers involved. Official standards for vessel compliance are unclear, leaving fishermen—many of whom have fished for generations—confused, not to mention the new inspectors. Heavy reliance on inexperienced staff makes inspections full of arbitrariness and uncertainty. Fishermen also questioned why such a massive inspection wasn’t scheduled during the off-season, but instead during the fishing season, showing no regard for their survival.
Not only were protesting villagers suppressed, but online discussions were heavily monitored. Related posts were quickly deleted, and some fishermen even received police warnings. One fisherman angrily said:
“This is the Communist Party of China. They won’t let people live.”

