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Archive for May 7th, 2009

Sea storm threat – the victims will be the people in the countries to be worst hit

Posted by africanpress on May 7, 2009

In Brief: Top 10 African countries most threatened by sea storm surges

Photo: Keith Marais/IRIN
Sea storm surges could affect more and more people

NAIROBI, – World Bank researchers have crunched population, economic, and elevation maps to analyse which countries are most at risk from storm surges, assuming a one metre rise in sea level (due to climate change).

An April 2009 report, Sea-Level Rise and Storm Surges – A Comparative Analysis of Impacts in Developing Countries, reveals “very heavy potential losses… [which] further strengthen the case for rapid action to protect endangered coastal populations”.

The 10 countries with the largest increases in at-risk land area are:

Mozambique
Madagascar
Nigeria
Mauritania
Senegal
Guinea-Bissau
Cote d’Ivoire
Gabon
South Africa
Somalia

bp/cb source.www.irinnews.org

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The fishing industry has suffered from years of neglect, and a lack of storage facilities

Posted by africanpress on May 7, 2009

GAMBIA: Luring fishermen back to the sea

Photo: Lama Jallow/IRIN
Fish-seller in Bakau, Gambia

BANJUL, – Dwindling stocks and profits are driving thousands of young Gambian fishermen out of the industry but the government hopes to lure them back through tighter regulation and greater investment.Turnaround?

But the Gambian government is trying to counter the trends, with plans to boost catches to up to 250,000 mt per year in coming years. The volume of the current stock is not known.

Fishing plays a central role in the government’s 2007-11 poverty reduction strategy, alongside agriculture.

The fishing industry brought in 11 percent of Gambia’s gross domestic product (GDP) in 2006, coming third after farming and livestock, according to the ministry. The livelihoods of over a third of Gambians are linked to fishing, according to the UN.

The Ministry of Fisheries, Water Resources and the Environment has recently revised the licenses of foreign fishing companies. “Past agreements set the stage for the exploitation and plundering of our water resources. Now the government is being more responsible, said Mustapha Suso, director of TalaFish, a non-profit that loans fishermen money for equipment. The African Development Bank and the governments of Japan and Taiwan are stepping in to help.

High among the government’s priorities is to improve fish markets so catches can be preserved for export, according to Fisheries Ministry official, Jobe. The Japanese government is investing $1 million to build a new fish market in Brikama, 76km from Banjul, which will have modern refrigeration and storage facilities, a fish-handling yard and an ice-making machine designed to help Gambians export more.

Expected to open in November, the facility is to provide vendors and fishermen training in sanitary storage and marketing of fish, according to Fisheries Ministry official Jobe. Some 17,000 Gambians are expected to benefit. Brikama Chief Dembo Bojan called it a blessing for the town.

And the government has set up a micro-credit scheme to help fishermen save enough money to buy better equipment.

Fishermen welcome these moves but say to make a real difference, bigger loans are needed. It costs $4,000 to buy a large pirogue, according to non-profit director Suso. The government is doing what it can to make the industry attractive again, but they should do more to provide loans to people who want to expand their business.

And fishermen urge the government to more vigilantly monitor poachers who, despite strict government regulation, continue to deplete stocks within the exclusion zone.

Fisheries Ministry official Jobe told IRIN the government does not have enough people to survey the entire coast as needed but are talking with counterparts in neighbouring Guinea-Bissau and Senegal about combining forces on this front.

as/aj/np source.www.irinnews.org

The fishing industry has suffered from years of neglect, and a lack of storage facilities means thousands of tonnes of fish are wasted each year, Ousman Mass Jobe, an official in the Ministry of Fisheries, Water Resources and the Environment, told IRIN. Building a new fish market is part of our approach to breathe new life into the industry. Now is the time to lure lost generations of Gambian youths back.

Up to 3,000 youths abandoned fishing between 2001 and 2005 the Minister of Fisheries, Water Resources and the Environment Mankuba Touray told reporters in early May.

Many of the youths dream of a life in Europe. “The chance is always there to befriend tourists and with this anything can happen,” said ex-fisherman Abubacar Jammeh, from Brufut, a fishing village outside the capital Banjul. A handful use their boats to smuggle migrants to Europe, charging up to US$1,500 per passenger, said Jammeh.

Young fishermen are leaving the trade partly because consistent underinvestment has caused fish markets to deteriorate, leaving thousands of tonnes (mt) of fish to rot each year, said Jammeh. Fishermen reportedly lose 300mt of sole annually, according to local newspapers.

As a result fishermen say they hardly turn a profit. Paying for boat hire, fuel and ice to preserve fish eats into Jammeh’s average monthly $90 revenues, down from $150 a few years ago.

Fishing can no longer take care of my needs and those of my family. I can barely take anything substantial from it home.

Fish stocks have dropped across coastal West Africa. Fishermen told IRIN mass trawlers operating within Gambia’s 12-mile exclusion zone decimate stocks of young fish.

A 2007 Institute for Security Studies report predicted that several African countries will soon face the permanent degradation of their marine environment with potential severe impact on food security and economic development.

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His skin did not save him – Cholmondeley found guilty of manslaughter, the judge should have gone for murder

Posted by africanpress on May 7, 2009

Some white men in Kenya think they are ranked -near to God, and can shoot and kill black Kenyans. This man should have been found guilty of murder and locked up for a very long time. Now that he has been found guilty of manslaughter – after slaughtering a Kenyan Maasai man, he will be sentenced and hopefully the judge will give him a long sentence and he be placed in a jail where he will meet rough Kenyan jail mates who may teach him some lesson. API

Written By:Margaret Kalekye

tom_delamere
Caption: The trial was the second murder case against the Eton-educated aristocrat, who was also accused of killing a wildlife ranger Samson Ole Sisina in April 2005.

The high court has found Lord Delamere’s grandson, Tom Cholmondeley guilty of manslaughter for killing stonemason Robert Njoya on the Delamere family’s Soysambu ranch, Naivasha in 2006.

Justice Muga Apondi in his 320 page verdict reduced the charge of murder to manslaughter saying the defense case had no merit.

“I find as a fact that it was the accused who had shot the deceased resulting in his death,” he said.

“In view of the above analysis I hereby find which I do, that the accused did not have any malice aforethought to kill the deceased.”

He said he had therefore decided  Cholmondeley should be acquitted of the murder charge, but found guilty of manslaughter.

He will be sentencednext week on May 13th.

Judge Apondi’s verdict comes two months after court assessors cleared Cholmondeley of the murder charge against him.

Lay assessors determined that there was insufficient evidence linking Cholmondeley to the deadly shot, or intent to kill.

The 40-year-old Cholmondeley has denied the killing and only admitted to shooting dogs on his 55,000-acre Soysambu ranch.

The accused was represented in court by Nairobi lawyer Fred Ojiambo.

The trial was the second murder case against the Eton-educated aristocrat, who was also accused of killing a wildlife ranger Samson Ole Sisina in April 2005.

That case was dropped for lack of evidence, triggering an outcry from the public and mass protests from Maasais.

source.kbc.ke

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