Keta (V/R), Nov. 22, -
Stakeholders in the fishing industry in Ghana are unhappy about the country’s
dwindling fish stock.
At a durbar in Keta to mark the
World Fisheries Day on the theme "Securing Sustainable Small-Scale
Fisheries; Fisher to Fisher Approach", players in the industry from across
the country lamented that over fishing, which was aided by illegal methods had
led to low out puts.
Mr Mark Newton, USAID Ghana
Energy Advisor, said activities of both local and foreign fishing vessels
contributed to the problem, which threatened small-scale fisheries along the
coast with irreversible consequences in the future.
He said the situation had caused
close to ten per cent reduction in annual yield targets, and that although the
effective management of fisheries was a complex task, commitment to a clear
cause held the key to securing the source of over 60 per cent of all protein in
the country.
Mr Newton said the USAID,
recognising the need to secure the livelihood of some 2.6 million Ghanaians in
the fishing sector had partnered government on efforts to sustain the industry
and together had initiated the Sustainable Fisheries Management Project (SFMP).
He said among others, a Fisheries
Watch Volunteer programme to encourage local fisher-folk into taking up
watchdog roles, and inter fisher-folk dialogues on resource sustainability had
been effected in collaboration with the Fisheries Commission and the Ghana
National Canoe Fisherman Council.
Mr Newton said Ghana's National
Marine Fisheries Management Plan had the potential to uphold the sector by
fighting harmful fishing practices towards replenishing fish stock, and called
on fishing communities and other stakeholders to uphold the initiative.
"To successfully ensure that
fishing regulations are followed, the people directly affected by the rules
must be involved in the implementation of government's plan and work towards a
situation where people can meet their needs without endangering their
future," he stated.
Mrs Elizabeth Naa Afoley Quaye,
the Minister of Fisheries and Aquaculture, said the SFMP-Fisheries Commission's
policy framework on fisheries co-management had realised mangrove restorations
and other resource replenishment programmes in the Pra, Densu and Ankobra estuaries.
She said the Ahotor Oven; an
improved and approved fuel efficient fish smoking system was being rolled out
across the country and would help reduce health risks and environmental
degradation.
Mrs Quaye said a
gender-mainstreaming strategy document was signed in 2016 to guide the Ministry
in ensuring the direct participation of women in fisheries management and that
SFMP was also supporting government in the fight against child labour and
trafficking; a major challenge in the fishing industry, by helping develop and
implement some strategies.
She said SFMP had committed to
securing fisher-folk by working with the Millennium Insurance, UT Life
Insurance and Vodafone in the establishment of the Fishers Future Plan
insurance scheme to benefit over 100,000 people.
Mrs Quaye appealed to the public
to support the fight against illegal fishing and said the Navy would intensify
its monitoring and offenders would be made to face the law.
Togbe Sri III, Paramount Chief of
Anlo State who chaired the occasion, said fish stock in the Anlo area was
diminishing faster, with the danger of unemployment and hunger and underscored
the need for a sustainable solution.
GNA

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