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The Documentary Podcast

West Africa’s Fish Famine

The Documentary Podcast

BBC

Society & Culture, Documentary

4.32.7K Ratings

🗓️ 25 February 2013

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Overfishing is blighting traditional livelihoods along the coast of Senegal. Fish catches are collapsing there after years of overfishing, mainly by foreign trawlers, some of whom are fishing illegally. Meanwhile, Senegal’s traditional fishermen have been evicted from the rich waters of neighbouring Mauritania, leading to a vicious circle of rapidly falling catches, economic desperation and yet more overfishing. Some have continued crossing the border, provoking an armed response from Mauritania’s coastguard. Senegal’s main traditional fishing port St Louis has seen anti-Mauritanian violence break out as a result. Alfonso Daniels travels to St Louis to find a community in despair, with some young men now seeing no choice but to join the exodus of migrants trying to reach Europe. He also gains rare access to Mauritania – usually off-limits to foreign journalists – and discovers an insatiable onshore fish processing industry now being encouraged across the region, and consuming catches on a vast scale. Much of the industry is fed by big foreign trawlers, and the end product, known as fishmeal, exported to wealthier countries to feed livestock and aquaculture. At the centre of this story is the humble sardinella, a small oily fish which migrates up and down the West African coast, breeding and supporting other species as it moves across borders. With bigger and more nutritious fish routinely exported, sardinella is a staple for several West African countries whose people cannot afford meat. It is also the stock that fishmeal factories typically utilise. Its increasing scarcity threatens millions with malnutrition. As fish stocks collapse and powerful interests vie for those that remain, ordinary Africans are paying the price. Producer: Michael Gallagher (Photo: Artisanal fishermen unload their catch on the beach at Nouadhibou, Mauritania's only fishing port. Credit: BBC)

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Thanks for downloading BBC Assignment, I'm Alfonso Daniels.

0:04.8

Now I'm from Spain and we Spaniards are passionate about our fish, after all we have the largest

0:10.6

fishing fleet in Europe.

0:12.9

Maybe that's why for many years now I've been interested in illegal fishing and the

0:16.8

impact it has on local communities.

0:19.9

So when the BBC commissioned me to report on the alarming declining catches in Senegal,

0:24.3

I was really delighted.

0:27.1

As you're about to hear, I discovered a community in distress.

0:31.8

But why are catches collapsing in one of the richest fishing grounds in the world?

0:36.0

Well, I also got rare access to neighbouring Mauritania and that's where I found a piece

0:40.9

of the jigsaw that is key to understand what's going on.

0:50.2

Welcome to Assignment on the BBC World Service.

0:59.2

For West Africa's artisan fishermen who pull their nets in by hand, singing is more than

1:04.8

just a tradition.

1:06.8

It's like a team, we have to sing so that they give us more strength, everybody is happy

1:13.8

to drag the fish net.

1:16.8

You know that today we have the fish.

1:20.6

Fisherman Moore in the eye is Senegalese, but he recorded this bountiful scene in the

1:25.3

waters of a different country, Senegal's next-door neighbour Mauritania.

1:30.8

Now the two countries have fallen out over fish and the happy songs are just a memory on

1:36.1

more smartphone.

1:40.6

Everything was fine, but once the Mauritanians decided to close their borders, our troubles

...

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