Små fiskere i Vestafrika protesterer mod mega-trawlere

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Lokale fiskersamfund langs den Vestafrikanske kyst har i en fælles erklæring bedt deres regeringer forbyde de enorme trawlere, der på én gang kan fange 7000 tons fisk. Det skriver Ahmed Diame fra Greenpeace Africa, som aldrig tidligere har set en sådan reaktion fra vrede og frustrerede fiskere.

Just one week after Chilean fishermen and Greenpeace vigorously protested against the Margiris mega trawler, Mauritanian fishermen and fishing communities in West Africa are also raising their voices against monster boats in their own waters.

In a statement sent out in Nouakchott, Mauritania, local fishermen called on West African governments to no longer allow mega trawlers into their fisheries because of the profounf impact they have on fishstocks – and local livelihoods as a result.

Take the Annelies Ilena for example. A few weeks ago this Monster Boat (formerly the Atlantic Dawn) was fishing in Mauritanian waters and in just one fishing expedition it caught froze almost 7,000 tonnes of pelagic fish. That’s seven million kilograms of fish: enough to feed 291 000 Senegalese people for a whole year.

In my career as Greenpeace oceans campaigner, I’ve had the opportunity to visit many fishing ports from Mauritania through to Ghana.

Never have I seen a reaction from people like the one I get if the Annelies Ilena is mentioned. Fishermen are angry, they are frustrated by the vessel’s presence. But more than that, they are scared.

And I understand that.

The impact the Annelies Ilena has on ocean ecosystems is not limited to the area where the trawler is active. Fish species tend to be migratory, so depleting a population in one area has a huge impact across the whole region.

It means that policies which allow Monster Boats to fish in Mauritania can actually destroy the catches of small-scale fishermen in neighbouring countries too: Monster Boats have a massive footprint.

In 2006, the same ship was kicked out by Mauritanian authorities after the fishermen strongly protested against it.
This time, the one piece of good news in all this is that more and more people are speaking up about Monster boats, and some governments are listening.

A global movement against these destroyers of the ocean is being born, lead by the people most affected by these trawlers. A movement whose sole message is: “Not Here, Not Anywhere!”

Ahmed Diame is an Oceans Campaigner at Greenpeace Africa.

Læs mere her:
http://www.greenpeace.org/africa/en/News/Blog/west-african-communities-rally-to-protest-mon/blog/46543/