Tag: Locals

  • ‘They became illegal overnight’: Colombia’s shark fishing ban turns locals into criminals

    ‘They became illegal overnight’: Colombia’s shark fishing ban turns locals into criminals

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    Every morning, Paola Arbolera loads a few crates of smoked shark and stingray on to her wooden canoe and drags it to the river. Before the sun rises, she rows in darkness to the market in Guapi, a small fishing town on Colombia’s Pacific coast, to sell her goods.

    She leaves her canoe under the rafters of the dock’s large loading bay, wedged between rubbish and other canoes, while fellow vendors unload bananas and plantain.

    A woman and two children in a canoe on a wide river

    At about 5am, Arbolera, a 35-year-old single mother of seven, sets up shop on a street corner, displaying her home-smoked fish. The sunrise brings a flurry of activity, and the market comes to life. A swarm of straw hats and elderly shoppers bustle around Arbolera’s simple stand, where she sells her produce until about midday to provide a meagre livelihood for her children.

    But doing this now makes Arbolera a criminal.

    In November 2020, the government of former president Iván Duque issued a decree banning shark fishing and its commercialisation in the hope of tackling shark-fin exports and protecting marine life.

    A Woman in a canoe is seen in silhouette under a jetty
    Two crates of smoked fish

    Arbolera relies solely on sales at the market for her income. She is illiterate, which drastically limits her few opportunities in the small town in Cauca, one of Colombia’s poorest provinces.

    “What else can I do?” Arbolera says. “It’s our destiny to keep working. If we can’t do this, how will we feed our children?”

    A woman is seen by a stall behind some smoked fish
    Paola Arbolera hauls a crate of fish
    Paola Arbolera with other female traders sells fish she smoked the previous afternoon

    Both industrial and small-scale shark fishing have been banned in Colombia since 2017, but the new decree introduced a blanket ban that criminalises artisanal fishing as well, which local people such as Arbolera depend on.

    “The decision marks a milestone in environmental public policy,” says Estefanía Rodríguez, a political advocacy adviser at MarViva, a marine conservation group. “The ban contributes positively to the health of marine ecosystems, the sustainability of shark populations and to the livelihood of coastal communities.”

    Two fishermen stand in the prow of a small boat with nets

    Although the decree was celebrated by environmentalists, it has put the livelihoods of many fishing communities on the line.

    As governments across the globe have scrambled to demonstrate their environmental credentials, Duque’s was no exception. His decree represents a clash between the preservation of Colombia’s marine ecosystems and the defence of its marginalised communities and their traditions.

    A boy smiles at the cmaeria through a fishing net

    The decree, introduced in March 2021, has jeopardised the wider supply chain and livelihoods of those who depend on it – from artisanal fishers and vendors, to cooks and families whose nutrition revolves around sharks.

    Critics of the former president claim the decree was a way to secure an easy environmental win to improve his deeply unpopular image in the country. They say it has added an unnecessary layer of difficulty to an already challenging way of life among coastal communities.

    “They made some of Colombia’s poorest communities suffer. They became illegal from one day to the next on a government’s whim,” says Diego Andrés Triana, a lawyer and adviser to the Association of Colombian Fishermen.

    “The Black communities that live along the Pacific are the poorest of the poor. They are the nobodies of the fishing sector,” Triana says.

    For towns such as Guapi, artisanal shark fishing is a longstanding traditional practice. Tollo – as the shark is known – provides regular sustenance for many families and holds significant cultural value among African-Colombian communities.

    A woman seen at a cooker at a roadside stall with plantains and fish preparing a local dish
    Shark Ceviche with rice and plantain
    Maria Perlaza and María Grueso in a kitchen

    • Maria Perlaza (top) prepares the traditional fish dish ceviche de tollo, served with rice and fried plantain, together with María Grueso (bottom right)

    The small shark is found extensively along Colombia’s Pacific coast and typically grows to about 1.5 metres (5ft) long. It is often the cheapest form of protein many coastal communities have access to and the culinary staple is enjoyed either smoked, stewed, fried or in a traditional ceviche.

    Most of the vendors in the market square are older women

    “Not having tollo in Guapi is like not having water in a desert. It’s important because it’s something cultural,” says Willingtong Obregón, who has been fishing for decades.

    Artisanal fishers spend a few days at sea plying their trade before returning with their catch. They predominantly fish from small boats or canoes, lowering thin nets into the water to catch anything they find.

    Cristina Aragón, a fish seller, with other female market vendors
    A woman carries smoked shark
    Women sit at a table in the market with smoked fish

    “[The ban] really affects us economically as it’s work through which we could easily provide for our families. It has a serious impact on the family subsistence of us Guapireños,” says Obregón, as he stands in the town market, flanked by women chopping up freshly caught fish.

    Organisations and local people in Guapi claim the fishing community was not properly consulted about the decree or involved in discussions before its implementation.

    Melba Angulo has been selling fish at Guapi market since the age of 10. “I’m aware that it affects the ecosystem, but to ban it they should have consulted us, who sell and fish it, to see what alternatives they could propose [for us] to sustain ourselves, because banning it ignores the families who live from this,” he says.

    A woman in a cap holds up smoked fish in the market square

    • Melba Angulo, who has her own fish stall in Guapi market square, has been selling fish since she was a child

    Colombia’s new vice-minister for the environment, Sandra Vilardy, admits: “We recognise the decree was not adequately consulted.”

    Local fishers along the Pacific coast do not target tollo but capture it largely by accident. Toss a large net along the coast and chances are you will catch tollo whether you want to or not.

    Tollo fishing is incidental, how can one avoid that?” says Otto Polanco Rengifo, a marine biologist and former director of the government’s National Authority of Aquaculture and Fishing. “The decree forces you to do the unavoidable. You cannot prohibit such a socioeconomically vulnerable population from doing what for decades and centuries has kept them alive.”

    Last year, as artisanal fisher Francisco “Pancho” Mina was returning to Guapi from several days at sea, he was stopped by the Colombian navy, which searched his boat for any illegal catch. Among the usual catfish and groupers, the authorities found 58 tollo sharks. They were confiscated by the authorities, who warned of more serious consequences if it happened again.

    Like Obregón and Arbolera, Mina claims to have little choice but to continue with his work, regardless of what the decree may say. During the high season, Mina says he can catch up to 150 tollo sharks.

    A pink house by the water, belonging to Cristina Aragón, a fish vendor

    “It’s pure necessity because we don’t have anything else to do. [The authorities] shouldn’t persecute a working peasant if we’re just trying to feed our families,” he says.

    Vilardy points out that the decree is meant to allow for incidental subsistence fishing, which raises questions about what happened to Mina.

    “There is a possibility for that incidental fishing to be used in a local context because we recognise that it has a traditional use, which is very local and closely linked to traditional consumption and culture,” Vilardy told the Guardian.

    Last month, the navy intercepted 904kg of illegally caught sharks onboard an industrial fishing boat off the coast of Bahía Solano, along the northern Pacific coast. They found 114 sharks – among them tollo – and 89 shark fins; 85% of the sharks were juveniles and below the minimum age to be caught.

    Two old me on a battered old fishing boat

    Artisanal fishers also have to compete with industrial-scale fishing boats to protect their income. Uber Vasesilla, a 71-year-old captain of an industrial vessel, roams the coasts for days on end, sweeping the ocean for all kinds of fish.

    After hours of trawling, his catch contains all sorts of marine life including eels, red snapper, stingrays, parrot fish, various crabs and puffer fish, but there is no sign of the popular shark.

    Three fishermen prepare fresh fish for refrigeration while seabirds wheel in the air above them
    An old man laughs as he talks to a young man lying on a bench
    Raya, Tollo, puffer fish and other species are returned to the sea by the fishing boat.

    • Fishers cut up fresh fish and prepare it for refrigeration while seabirds wheel in the air, waiting for the leftovers thrown into the sea (bottom right). Wilfrido Hurtado, 65, and Harold Bermúdez, 27, watch football on TV while they wait for the fishing nets to come up

    “There’s not much tollo out there these days,” Vasesilla says, as he calmly steers his rusty ship with his foot. Either way, he and his ageing crew of six return any unwanted tollo and stingrays to the sea, as required by the decree.

    So far this year, the Colombian navy has seized 7.4 tonnes of banned species.

    On assuming power this year, the new leftwing government promised a broad slate of environmental policies and vowed to protect the interests and cultural traditions of marginalised African-Colombian communities.

    The administration is now tasked with implementing its green agenda as well as finding a way to manage the decree while supporting the livelihoods of rural African-Colombians affected by it.

    Vilardy says the ministry is reviewing the decree. “The plan is to work with the communities and assess possible improvements to the decree … for us to make adjustments based on a good mechanism of participation. It is very valuable for us to be able to keep cultures alive,” she says.

    Most of the vendors in the market square are older women. 05, December, 2022. Guapi, Cauca. Fernanda Pineda Guapi, Cauca. Fernanda Pineda

    In the meantime, the fishers and vendors of Guapi have no option but to defy the decree and continue working on the fringes of legality to safeguard their livelihoods.

    For Mina, the choice is simple: “If we live off this, then we’ll have to continue fishing.”

    Palm trees silhouetted against an orange sunrise

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    #illegal #overnight #Colombias #shark #fishing #ban #turns #locals #criminals
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Adani imbroglio: MVA, locals worry over fate of mega Dharavi revamp project

    Adani imbroglio: MVA, locals worry over fate of mega Dharavi revamp project

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    Mumbai: As the Adani Group battles its current crisis on multiple fronts, the Maharashtra Congress, Shiv Sena (UBT) and residents of Dharavi on Thursday raised questions over the fate of the ambitious redevelopment project for Asia’s biggest slum.

    In end-November 2022, the state government had finalised Adani Properties Ltd.’s bid to invest Rs 5,069 crore in the Dharavi redevelopment mega project.

    At that time, the Metropolitan Commissioner of Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority (MMRDA), S.V.R. Srinivas, had said that the proposal would be sent for the state government’s approval, a special purpose vehicle would be formed, and if all goes well, “the project shall kick-start by February 2023”.

    When his reactions were sought again on Thursday, Srinivas said that he would not like to comment on the matter right now, “maybe after 2-3 days”.

    However, state Congress General Secretary Sachin Sawant feels that all is not well considering the nosediving of Adani Group shares and its probable cascading effect on the Indian economy.

    “The Maharashtra government must clarify its stand on the Dharavi redevelopment project. Will it allow the fate of lakhs of people to be connected to a company whose fate itself seems to be in jeopardy,” Sawant asked.

    Shiv Sena (UBT) national spokesperson Kishore Tiwari claimed that the erstwhile Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) government was ‘deliberately toppled’ (in June 2022) so that the Adani Group could be given various big projects.

    “Why just Dharavi? What about the future of the Navi Mumbai International Airport and other major projects which have been given to the Adani Group? The Centre and the Maharashtra government must immediately clarify and cancel the allotments,” Tiwari demanded.

    The Dharavi Rehabilitation Committee (DRC) representing the local residents is virtually panicking over the fast-paced developments in the financial sector which are grabbing gloomy headlines daily.

    “The Adani Group’s reliability and credibility is now in serious doubt… We feel that they may not be able to take up and complete this project on time. So, we are asking the Maharashtra government to re-tender it and give it to another party,” DRC President Raju Korde told IANS.

    A meeting of the DRC shall be held later on Thursday night to finalise the strategy, besides writing to the state government to call for re-bids and award the project to a financially sound investor or consortium, he added.

    In fact, in mid-January, Chief Minister Eknath Shinde had brought the Dharavi revamp proposal to the global centre-stage in Davos, where he extolled it as “the largest public-private-partnership (PPP) real estate programme for slum redevelopment”.

    Terming it as an “environment-friendly project”, Shinde had said that around 56,000 families would be rehabilitated there with free homes of 300 sq ft to each slum-dweller there”, wowing an influential audience at the World Economic Forum held in the ski-resort in Switzerland.

    With an estimated timeline of around 15 years, the project – bedeviled by many problems and failed attempts for a makeover for over 15 years – will see construction of over 10 million sq ft, giving a total face-lift to the 520-acre locality.

    Dharavi – literally meaning ‘quicksand’ – is notorious as the dirty underbelly of Mumbai, housing over 10 lakh people crammed into a 2.1 sq km corner. But it is supposed to transform itself from an ugly duckling to a glittering district with swank buildings, wide roads, residential and commercial areas, schools, hospitals, gardens, playgrounds etc. planned there.

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    #Adani #imbroglio #MVA #locals #worry #fate #mega #Dharavi #revamp #project

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Amid outrage among locals, TN forest dept chasing away wild elephant into deep forests

    Amid outrage among locals, TN forest dept chasing away wild elephant into deep forests

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    Chennai: After strong protests by the people in the Gudalur area in Nilgiris district, the Tamil Nadu forest department is chasing away a tuskless male elephant, also knwon as ‘Makhna’, into the deep forests in the Madumalai Tiger Reserve (MTR).

    Forest officials of MTR told IANS that the elephant, which is around 40 years old, has not yet posed threat to humans. But of late, there have been complaints from the local people that elephants have been creating havoc in their agricultural lands, causing damage to crops.

    While the Makhna has not been antagonistic towards human beings, recently it destroyed three farm lands, causing extensive damage to crops.

    A senior official of the forest department told IANS, “People have launched a campaign in Gudalur and other areas of Nilgiris to drive this elephant into the forest. Even though we know that it’s a harmless elephant, we have now decided to chase it into the deep forest land in the MTR area.”

    The official said that the forest department is driving the elephant into deep forests taking into account the safety of the tusker.

    It is to be noted here that the Palakkad Tusker 7 (PT7), which had killed a morning walker and damaged crops extensively in the Dhoni area in Palakkad district in Kerala, was captured a few days back by the Kerala forest department. Medical check-up showed that 15 pellets were fired at it from air guns.

    Kerala Forest Minister A.K. Saseendran had said that farmers should not resort to such cruel acts against elephants.

    Tamil Nadu forest department officials are hence driving the Makhna into the deep forests to prevent it from the wrath of the local people.

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    #outrage #among #locals #forest #dept #chasing #wild #elephant #deep #forests

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Locals Ferry Male Patient On Stretcher As Authorities ‘Yet To Clear Road of Accumulated Snow’ on Road Connecting Jumagund to

    Locals Ferry Male Patient On Stretcher As Authorities ‘Yet To Clear Road of Accumulated Snow’ on Road Connecting Jumagund to

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    Murtaza Mushtaq

    Kupwara, Jan 18 (GNS): Braving extreme chill amid prevailing inclement weather, people in Safawali village of Jumagund in Kupwara on early Wednesday morning had no other option than to put a male patient on a stretcher to ferry it a hospital at Zurhama as the road connecting the areas, as per locals, continues to remain shut due to accumulated snow.

    A group of locals told GNS that a 42-year-old person, Irshad Ahmad Raina son of Farooq Ahmad Raina, developed abdominal pain the previous night. “The patient was given medication, but he didn’t show any signs of relief, following which it was decided to evacuate him to a hospital at Zurhama, which is some 25 kilometres from here”, they said. “As the road is yet to be cleared of the accumulated snow, the patient had to be put on a stretcher”, they claimed.

    Deputy Sarpanch Jumagund, seconding the claims of locals, told GNS that “even as the persons ferrying him (patient) started their journey at around 5 in the morning, they were however yet to reach their destination.”

    “We not only fear for the safety of the patient but for those ferrying him alike as the weather is very cold”, he said.

    The deputy village-head in the meantime alleged that the interior roads are also yet to be cleared of the accumulated snow.

    “We urge the authorities to clear the roads as soon as possible to alleviate our sufferings”, he said.

    When contacted, Deputy Commissioner Kupwara Doifode Sagar Dattaray told GNS that there have been frequent avalanche warnings amid prevailing weather conditions. “With the (avalanche) warnings being high, we don’t want to act in haste as it may put the precious lives on stake”, he said. (GNS)

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    #Locals #Ferry #Male #Patient #Stretcher #Authorities #Clear #Road #Accumulated #Snow #Road #Connecting #Jumagund

    ( With inputs from : thegnskashmir.com )