
BEIRA, Mozambique—Luis Domingo, a fisherman in Beira,
Mozambique, is following the trade that has sustained his family for
generations.
But now, he said, “I can go out to the ocean for the whole day and come back ashore with a very small catch or nothing at all.”
“I don’t know what is happening, but we are running out of fish.”
Depleted
fish stocks have caused some of his fellow fishermen to leave the
villages dotting the Indian Ocean coastline, Domingo said. They’ve
settled inland to try small-scale farming.
“But we are
experiencing frequent droughts in the country and farming is difficult
too,” he said. “For many years our lives were centered on fishing but
we’re now running out of options.”
Some fishermen blamed Chinese vessels for dwindling fish stocks.
Eduardo Chisale, another fisherman in the area, said, “I have heard of so many Chinese fishing vessels here in Mozambique and some of these vessels are fishing illegally. I pray they are not going to leave us with no fish at all. I survive on fishing and nothing else.”
A Wide Net and a False Flag
It’s difficult to say exactly how big the problem of Chinese plunder in Africa
is. Studies on the topic have found that Chinese fisheries agreements
with African governments lack transparency. Some vessels with licenses
flout quotas; many vessels operate without any license at all.
China has the largest distant-water fishing fleet in the world. And an estimated 80 percent
of Chinese distant-water catch is from illegal, unreported, and
unregulated (IUU) fishing, according to a report commissioned by the
European Parliament in 2012.
Some investigations of IUU fishing in
Africa have confirmed a heavy Chinese presence. For example, Chinese
vessels accounted for more than half the IUU vessels identified off the
coast of Guinea in a 2007 investigation by the Environmental Justice
Foundation.
IUU fishing is threatening the fishing industry and the health of the oceans globally. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) nearly 90 percent of the world’s marine fish stocks are now fully exploited.
In West Africa, about half of all the fishing is IUU. That represents more than $2 billion annually that could be in the hands of local fishermen and communities. It also represents hundreds of thousands of local jobs.
In East African countries, such as Mozambique, the problem is rampant and locals have little left to sustain them.
Backed Into a Corner
Many
fishermen are driven “into crime, terrorism, and piracy,” said Yasin
Hagi Mohamoud, foreign minister of East Africa’s Republic of Somaliland,
in an open appeal he wrote in March.
“Somaliland’s
small fishing fleet cannot compete with Chinese vessels and the
advanced technology that they employ. It is said that one Chinese ship
can catch as many fish in a single week as the average fishing boat in
Africa can catch in an entire year. Across Africa, this disparity drains
economies of billions of dollars.”
For many years, the Chinese have similarly dominated the natural resource industries on land, particularly logging and mining.
“[Logging] is dominated by Chinese people who go to the bush and
convince the poorest people to cut the logs,” Imede Falume, Mozambique’s
deputy director of forestry, told Reuters last year.
At
the time, Mozambique’s government signed a memorandum of understanding
with China to try to stem the major loss of forestland—10 percent of the
country’s forests had disappeared since 2000, according to the
non-profit Global Forest Watch.
A recent investigation by Zam Magazine in Mozambique
found that “the routes used for the plunder of timber before, and now
of fish, seem to have been overlapping.” The magazine alleged that “a
network of Mozambican ruling party leaders and Chinese businesses” are
responsible.
Chisale, the
Mozambican fisherman, said he feared reprisal from powerful people
linked to the illegal fishing in Mozambique if he spoke with The Epoch
Times further about it. But at the same time, he’s optimistic his
government will do something about the situation.
“I know our government will do something to protect us because fishing is our future,” Chisale said.
Solutions
In November, at a meeting in the capital, the Mozambique Ministry of Sea Inland Waters and Fisheries’ national director of operations, Leonilde Chimarize, said the government is working on it.
She said that last year, there were
more than 200 prosecutions for illegal fishing and most of the culprits
were foreign shipping vessels. He said that the Mozambican government is
reviewing legislation, including creating maritime courts to curb
illegal fishing in the country.
Ahmed
Diame, an oceans campaigner for Greenpeace Africa, has called on
African countries to work together on the problem. He said in a 2017 blog post,
“I have seen crew applaud their boat’s arrest, knowing the wrongs of
their captain’s orders. And I have heard people on land across West
Africa speak about their suffering.”
The
non-profit Stop Illegal Fishing has helped African countries work
together through an effort called FISH-i Africa. It created a network of
countries, including Mozambique, that share fisheries intelligence.
For
example, if a particular vessel has acted illegally in the waters off
the coast of one country, the other countries are alerted and block it
from entering their waters.
Peter Sinon, former minister of natural resources for Seychelles, said
in a FISH-i Africa press release that before FISH-i, “[we were]
shooting in the dark, we were not seeing the whole picture. The illegal
fishers would play us one against the other, be clean in one port and
illegal in another.”
China
has taken some action to address the problem. From 2016 to 2018, it
canceled subsidies worth $111.6 million for vessels caught fishing
illegally, according to Greenpeace. It has also revoked the distant-water fishing licenses of several companies.
China
has had a shaky relationship with international laws, such as the U.N.
Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), that would protect Africa’s
coasts.
“While China has
adjusted its legislation in accordance with UNCLOS, enforcement of these
laws and regulations remains a great challenge,” said
Tabitha Grace Mallory of Johns Hopkins University, in testimony to the
US–China Economic and Security Review Commission in 2012. China’s will
to implement UNCLOS has been called into question in its dealings with
other nations in the South China Sea, closer to home.
With
some other international initiatives related to IUU, China has either
refused to sign, or signed but not ratified. For example, it did not sign
the UN FAO’s 2009 Port State Measures Agreement, which would require
port states to inspect fishing vessels and deny entry to those engaged
in IUU fishing.
The Human Costs
The
Environmental Justice Foundation (EJF), a UK-based organization working
internationally to address threats to environmental security and their
associated human rights abuses, said marine fisheries are critical for
the food security, income, and employment of coastal populations across
West Africa.
An estimated
6.7 million people depend directly on fisheries for food and
livelihoods, with fish accounting for over 50 percent of animal protein
intake in countries such as Ghana and Sierra Leone, EJF said in a recent
report.
Greenpeace’s Diame spoke to the conditions of the people working on the boats and sanitation issues for food handling, when he described one vessel he observed: “Nets, rubbish and dead fish were strewn over the rusty deck. We found out that the tiny, 21m long boat was home to at least 20 workers, living in incredibly cramped and unhygienic conditions.”
Source:https://www.theepochtimes.com/mozambiques-fishermen-point-to-china-as-fish-stocks-dwindle_3140819.html



