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fishing about and about fishing
menakhem ben yami

Fishing about and about fishing

The Philippine Disaster and Local Relief Action

 

Small-scale fisheries (SSF) is not only a great provider of employment but often also of the only or most important income in rural poor coastal communities, there's something in the fishing of the fisherfolk that makes it their preferred way of life. It's producing over a half of fresh foodfish and presents a foundation and a pillar of local economies. But, SSF, about the most dangerous occupation worldwide, only too frequently operate under adverse exploitative socio-economic conditions, facing greedy bureaucracy and exploitative fishmongers, insecure fishing rights, and inadequate access to on-shore services. SSF are also most affected by coastal and upstream pollution and degradation of natural habitats, including areas of spawning and growing of young stages.  

Thus, in many areas of the world fisherfolk are notoriously poor and their communities relatively underdeveloped. Into the bargain of poverty enter natural disasters, where in marine countries fishermen are the first to die, the first to suffer and the first to lose property. In southeastern Asian countries, even when times are "normal", fisherfolk are plagued by bad weatherand bad seasons. 

The blow of Yolanda. The super-typhoon Haiyan called also Yolanda that last November hit the eastern Vissayas and a cluster of islands in the central Philippines with sustained winds of 315 km/hr (195 mph) and squalls of 380 km/hr (235 mph) i.e. equivalent to a category 5 hurricane, was considered the strongest tropical cyclone on the record anywhere in the world. Its large diameter of 1,850 km (abt. 1,000 naut.miles)  caused clouds to affect two-thirds of the country, and tropical-storm-force winds to extend 240 km from its center.

With some 4 mln houses heavily damaged or destroyed, more than 9 million people were affected and nearly 2 million displaced in 44 provinces, 536 municipalities and 55 cities. Some 7,000 are dead and missing (assumed dead) due to unforeseen 6-m (20-ft) storm surges that deluged the port city and provincial capital Tacloban, where many of the inhabitants unforeseen ignored the evacuation advice. Around 16 500 seaweed farmers – mostly women – also lost their livelihoods.

According to Rodrigue Vinet, acting FAO Representative in the Philippines, "The damage caused to the fisheries sector in North Philippines by the super-typhoon is immense and spans the entire value chain, from catch to market, and  in the context of livelihoods, these losses are crippling.” The Philippine Department of Agriculture reported that  small-scale fishermen were the worst affected by Haiyan with tens of thousands of small boats and their fishing gear destroyed or damaged, while larger commercial boats suffered less. The "municipal marine fishery" exclusive from the shoreline to 15 km offshore, lost most of the boats authorized to fish there. 

The typhoon also destroyed fisheries' infrastructure including jetties and landing ports, ice and cold storage and processing and marketing facilities, boat repair and maintenance yards,  as well as aquaculture infrastructure such as oyster rafts, crab, shrimp and mussel farms, inland tilapia cages, hatcheries, and fish ponds.

 

 

           Fishing bancas destroyed by the typhoon on Panay Island, Western Visayas.

 

 Eastern, Central and Western Visayas and Mimaropa - the worst-hit regions – are major producers in both aquaculture and fisheries, according to the Philippines Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources.

 

 

Rehabilitation. FAO has called for fast rehabilitation of the livelihoods of the small-scale fisherfolk and fish farmers, as well as people directly and indirectly dependent on the fishing sector. Because experience from the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami and other large-scale disasters has shown that unplanned   oversupply of fishing boats and equipment during the recovery can cause excess pressure on fish stocks, and thus negatively affect livelihoods of the remaining fishermen, boats need to be rebuilt and replaced in a coordinated manner.. Replacement fishing gear should be legal and boats should be built and repaired with quality materials, taking no short-cuts on the safety of fishermen." 

 

The Peter project. Named after Shimon, the Sea of Galilee fisherman, who had become one of the 12 Apostles and, later, the first Bishop of Rome, the Peter Project was started by the Negrense Volunteers for Change (NVC) 3 years before the blow of Yolanda. The NVC foundation, based on the Negros Island in Central Philippines, at first has focused on providing jointly with some others tens of classrooms in local schools and nutrition programs for children. Its first excursion into fisheries was to donate motorized bancas to 29 poor fishermen of a coastal village in Negros Occidental province.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Now, following the disastrous Yolanda, NVC president, Ms. Millie Kilayko, said her group launched Peter Project 2 to raise funds for motorized bancas after thousands of fishermen lost theirs to Yolanda. Yolanda has left 9,500 fishermen in Northern Panay and 981 in Negros Occidental  and still more in Samar, Leyte and northern Cebu without fishing boats to earn a living for their families who are already reeling from the destruction of their houses and loss of most of their belongings. In response to this need NVC is soliciting for donations from various parts of the world, and so far has collected sums sufficient to acquire at least 700 bancas for beneficiaries mostly but not only on northern Panay Island. “We designed The Peter Project to become more than just a boat-awarding facility – said Ms. Kilayko - We crafted a comprehensive agreement with the fisherman, engaged and trained some of the wives in livelihood, and enrolled their children in NVC’s nutrition program."  

The Project's site is http://www.nvcfoundation-ph.org/projects/the-peter-project and it's most likely that this native Philippine initiative would follow FAO's request and steer clear of excesses. There're, of course, international and national official relief efforts, but this initiative of a local/regional voluntary organization most certainly deserves national appreciation and even admiration among developing countries, worldwide. 

 

A traditional Philippine banca

 

 

 

 

 

 

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