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November 2014 GOING FAST Lake Malawi, one of the largest lakes in Africa, faces dwindling fish stocks which put livelihoods at risk. By IRIN KARONGA – A combination of overfishing and the use of illegal fishing gear has seen fish stocks in Lake Malawi dwindle to the point that local people's livelihoods and food security are now under threat. Not so long ago, scores of women and girls carrying baskets full of fish flocked to commuter buses at bus stops and police checkpoints along the lakeshore roads trying to coax passengers on board to buy their fish. Nowadays, the women and their baskets of fish are a rare sight, as are the large bags of fish waiting at bus stops with their owners to be transported to distant towns and cities such as Mzuzu, Zomba, Blantyre and Malawi’s capital, Lilongwe. "The catches from the lake are no longer as they used to be," said Eliness Namwira of Ngara, a popular fishing spot in Malawi's northern Karonga District. "These days, we go without a catch even when we are at the middle period of the year that we have, over the years, associated with the best fish catches."
Spencer Kondowe, 74, has been relying on fishing for a livelihood since the early 1970s. "In those days, we could catch loads and loads of fish just close to the shore. In fact, even primary school-going boys would catch as much fish as possible using hooks while standing on the rocks onshore," he said. "That is not the case these days. Even if you paddle canoes deep into the lake, there is no guarantee that you are going to come back with fish. The situation is getting worse by the day, and you can see for yourself that the racks on which the fish were being dried are very empty."
The same situation is playing out in other areas which fishermen used
to rely on for good catches, including Ngara in Karonga, Usisya in
Nkhata Bay and Chitimba in Rumphi. Prohibited fishing gear
"Unfortunately, some of these fishermen have been using fishing
gear that is not recommended because it catches even the tiniest fish,”
Singini told IRIN. “They use such gear because they always want to
go back to the shore with something. This paints a hopeless situation
because there is no chance for the replacement of the harvested fish
stocks." The report specifically identifies nkacha, an open water fishing net widely used on the lake despite being banned. The dwindling fish stocks threaten the livelihoods of about 60,000 Malawians directly employed as fishermen and a further 350,000 who are involved in fish processing, fish marketing, net making, boat building and engine repair, according to the Department of Fisheries.
Eva Mwalupafya, a Karonga woman who used to earn a living from bringing
fish from Lake Malawi to sell in Zambia, said the lack of fish for
resale has left her with few options. "I don't know how I will support them now. The tomatoes easily go bad and you cannot transport them over long distances as I used to do with the smoked fish." Smith Nyasulu, a fisherman from Usisya in Nkhata Bay, also said he educated his children from sales of the fish he caught on the lake. Now he worries about his future and that of his community. "Most of the lakeshore areas do not have alternative means of generating money," he said. The shrinking supply of fish from the lake also has significant implications for food security in Malawi, where most of the population can rarely afford to buy meat, and rely on fish from the lake as a crucial source of protein, minerals and micro-nutrients. In its fisheries and aquaculture country profile for Malawi, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) notes that “the [fishing] sector has a significant impact on food and nutrition security, especially in the lake districts.” It adds that fishing communities tend to be better off than other communities in terms of the amount and variety of food they eat. Small-scale fish farming In a move aimed at protecting the livelihoods and food security of lakeshore communities, Mzuzu University is promoting small-scale fish farming as an alternative to relying on fish from the lake. Singini explained that with minimal training and cost, individuals could dig ponds and rear fish for food and sale. "Most fishermen today come back from fishing errands with a zero catch. Fish farming can fill the gaps in the need for fish. The good thing is that there are fish species that are early maturing and easy to care for."
One of the beneficiaries, Melina Phiri, told IRIN fish farming is providing a steady income and source of food for her family. “I have bought iron sheets for my house, have deposited money towards procurement of a dairy cow and have been keeping a steady supply of fish for food without relying on that from the lake. I have also used money from sales of the fish to buy basic needs including salt and soap,” she said.
-ends- The above article is reproduced from IRIN (the humanitarian news and analysis service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs), 7 November 2014. When reproducing this feature, please credit Third World Network Features and (if applicable) the cooperating magazine or agency involved in the article, and give the byline. Please send us cuttings. And if reproduced on the internet, please send the web link where the article appears to twnet@po.jaring.my. 4164/14
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