fishermen |
Fishermen
in communities of Brass and Southern Ijaw Local Governments Areas,
Bayelsa State, have decried the unpleasant activities of fishing trawler
operators, who they accused of damaging their fishing gears, attacking
local anglers and violating maritime laws.
The fishing trawlers which should be on the high sea,
about five nautical miles away, now come very close to the shore where
local fisher men/women operate, and in the process, wrench the fishing
nets, hooks and other tools.
Speaking
with one of the Fishermen, James Sampson, that the
excesses of trawler operators has forced many of the locals to stay away
from the sea.
According
to Sampson “fishing is our means of livelihood, but the excesses of the
trawler operators have forced many of our people out of business. The
trawler operators have continued to violate the existing laws, which
prevent them from operating close to the shoreline and in the process,
destroying our fishing gears as well as loss of lives”.
The
fishermen have called on the security agencies, state and federal
governments to rescue them by prevailing on the owners of the big
fishing trawlers to abide by the maritime laws and desist from operating
close to the shoreline and destroying their fishing gears. They also
lodged similar complaint with the Environmental Rights Action/Friends of
the Earth (ERA/FoEN).
Also
lamenting the predicament of the local fishermen, the Community
Development Committee, (CDC) Chairman of Sangana community, Akassa axis
of Brass council area, Benjamin Ayibatonye, said: “Our people are
really suffering from these trawler operators. They come beyond where
they are not expected to be seen fishing. In times past, we use to see
them only when we proceed deeper into the sea, but these days, they come
into areas they were never seen before, as if the kind of fish they are
looking for are now closer to the coastline. Each time they come, they
destroy people’s nets.
Ayibatonye
explained that each time the fisher men tried call the trawler
operators to attention, the latter would begin to shoot at them. He however called on the government to defend the rights of the local fishermen.
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