We don't have money or staff, says fisheries department
In a recent briefing by the department for MPs on progress in addressing the grievances of the small-scale fishing sector and on implementing the small-scale fisheries policy, African National Congress MP Andrew Madella wanted to know if there was a programme aimed at establishing cooperatives.
...three people for a coastline of 4,000km and over 300 fishing communities.
"Or does the department expect communities to do it themselves? If there is no one taking the lead, taking communities by the hand and explaining their options, all this will remain a pipe dream. We need to concretely move toward the things we want to implement," he said.
Acting deputy director for Fisheries Management Asanda Njobeni admitted to MPs the department does not have the money or the personnel to support cooperatives for a full five years. Njobeni said support would be limited to a shorter time. "The reality is we don't have the money and we don't have the people. There are only three people in the Directorate for Small-Scale Fisheries Implementation. That means three people for a coastline of 4,000km and over 300 fishing communities."
Plan
According to the department, 316 small-scale fishing communities have been registered along the coast. The plan is that in November and December cooperatives in the Northern Cape will be registered and allocated rights; between December 2017 and March 2018 cooperatives will be established, registered and allocated rights in the Western Cape and Eastern Cape; and KwaZulu-Natal will follow in March 2018.
Democratic Alliance MP Annette Steyn wanted to know if the department had the necessary buy-in from communities. "It is one thing to sit here and announce: 'We are going to do these things.' If you don't have the support of fishing communities it will not help."
Steyn remarked on the absence of representatives of the small-scale fisheries sector at the parliamentary meeting.
Madella also referred to complaints from communities that fishermen are apparently struck off permit lists without explanation. "It seems there are officials who play judge and jury, who decide who will have an income and who not, without any reasonable explanation."
Spokesperson for the Hout Bay Fishers Community Trust Ikram Halim told GroundUp the trust had not been informed about the briefing to Parliament. He complained about a lack of communication from the department. "They do all the talking but never properly with us. And while they talk and talk about us, our communities die of hunger. We will not be able to survive another 10 years," said Halim.
He said not everyone would benefit from the cooperatives provided for in the policy and the department should rather "take away the quotas of the big companies."
"Big companies have been benefiting for years. It is time for some radical economic transformation in the small-scale fishing industry," he said.
Source: GroundUp
Read this report on News24Wire.com.
Source: allAfrica
AllAfrica is a voice of, by and about Africa - aggregating, producing and distributing 2000 news and information items daily from over 130 African news organisations and our own reporters to an African and global public. We operate from Cape Town, Dakar, Lagos, Monrovia, Nairobi and Washington DC.
Go to: http://allafrica.com/