FREETOWN, 17
April 2007 (IRIN) - FREETOWN, 17 April 2007 (IRIN) - Meriam Samu travels more than 30km every morning to buy the fresh catch of the day from local fishermen in the western part of the capital,
Freetown. But these days there are fewer and fewer fish for her to choose from. "I have been doing this business for several years. Before we had stable prices for fish at Leones 3,000
[US$1.00] per 5kg carton, but now the retail prices are between Leones 5,000 [$1.75] to Leones 15,000 [$5.00]," said Samu, 43. As a result, it is more difficult for her earn money at the busy
Kroo Town Road market as the mackerel, snapper and other fish are becoming more difficult for the average Sierra Leonean to afford. Samu, like the fishermen themselves, blames foreign trawlers for the
depletion of Sierra Leone's fish stocks. "We cannot rely on the fishing vessels because they do not go to sea every day, but the fishermen do and I am afraid that when the canoe men decide to
stop fishing how will our people eat fish? Sierra Leoneans should not be crying because of high fish prices because fish should be in abundance here," she said. Fish generally have been a cheap and
easily available source of protein for Sierra Leoneans, who are amongst the poorest people in the world. Recovering from a decade-long civil war, livelihoods are difficult to sustain and joblessness
is rampant. About 70 percent of the country's 5.3 million people live below the poverty line and 26 percent are considered extremely poor, according to the United Nations. "What we're seeing is
local fishing communities repeatedly telling us their ability to catch fish is declining, the size of their catch is declining and the size of the fish is declining," said Steven Trent, executive
director of the London-based Environmental Justice Foundation (EJF), an independent pressure group for environmental security and human rights. Depleted resource About 80,000 make their
living through fishing in Sierra Leone, according to the Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources. The country loses an estimated $29 million annually to illegal and unregulated fishing, and its
neighbours Guinea and Liberia lose about $110 million and $10 million respectively, according to EJF.Musa Sankoh, a fisherman for the past decade, said trawlers have especially been a problem since
2006. As a result, he said, many fishermen fear entering the high seas to cast their nets, which are their only means of livelihood, so they stay closer to shore where there are fewer fish. "Now things are becoming very difficult for us fisherman at sea where the foreign trawlers normally cut our nets with impunity and this is slowing down our efforts to supply more fish for the
locals," said Sankoh. Each canoe barely generates $33 per day, compared to up to $66 in previous years, he said. The Kingtom wharf in Freetown shows the evidence of discouragement. On any given
day dozens of abandoned canoes rest idle on the beach the fishermen have sought a living elsewhere. Samuel Lewallie, sitting in the canoe he made 10 years ago, continues to fish but his
diminishing earnings are feeding his anger toward the government. "We are paying license fees to the government the same as the trawlers, but the government seems to favour those industrial people
more than us," he said. "We are Sierra Leoneans and this is our home, foreign merchants cannot have more rights than us." Rudolph Murray, an agent for a Chinese trawler operating off Sierra Leone,
says the fishermen's complaints hold little weight. "They are just afraid because we have the capacity to grab more fish than them," he said. "This is competitive business." Securing the
future The government has granted fishing rights to Egyptian, Chinese and Russian trawlers, according to the Fisheries Ministry. Winston Gbondo, the assistant director for fisheries, denied that
foreign vessels received preferential treatment. He said the government had set up an "insured exclusive zone" for local fishermen and that trawlers entering the area would be fined $30,000. "The
trawlers have their own operating zone, but the problems we have had is the surveillance of the sea to ensure that trawlers do not encroach into this zone," he said. "The ministry does not have the
logistical capacity to carry out the surveillance. We have given this function to the navy." Despite these efforts enforcement is problematic, Trent said, in part because in countries where
wages are poor corruption can thwart efforts to implement laws. "The problem here, as with many developing states, you have extreme resource constraints," said Trent of EJF. "It's very difficult to
monitor, to control and enforce the law. It is almost impossible for countries like Sierra Leone to deal with this without concerted efforts internationally." He said EJF backed efforts to abolish
flags and ports of convenience so it is easier to track vessels. The organisation also supports improving control and surveillance assistance to developing countries and putting more of the burden on
markets where the pirated fish is consumed, such as in the European Union. If measures are not taken, he said, fish stocks could collapse. ak/cs/nr