Accra, April 16, - The United State Agency for International
Development (USAID) has partnered some local Non-Governmental Organisations to
empower local fishing communities on the proper management of fisheries
resources as part of a co-management scheme being considered in Ghana.
The co-management scheme has been
recognised as a global best practice to sustain fisheries resources to ensure
food security.
The USAID is implementing the
programme through its Sustainable Fisheries Management Programmes (SFMP), with
partners including Hen Mpoano, Friends of the Nation (FoN), the Central and
Western Fishmongers Improvement Association and the Village Savings and Loans
Association.
The USAID and its partners have
developed draft local management plans together with communities in the Densu,
Pra and Ankobra estuaries, which include community-led written plans aligned
with the draft national co-management policy and further development of the
national co-management framework.
Sustaining fisheries resources is
particularly important for the most vulnerable population, as the fisheries
sector is estimated to contribute over 60 per cent to total protein uptake
nationally.
Through the partnerships,
USAID-SFMP is working with the NGOs to operate within the Densu, Pra and
Ankobra estuaries, to restore the mangroves and fisheries resources.
Mangroves are best known places
where most fishes lay and hatch their fingerlings, which later swim back to the
rivers and mature.
During a recent media outreach,
organised by the USAID-SFMP, to fishing communities in the Western and Central
Regions, it was revealed that most of the fishmongers depended on the mangroves
as firewood fuel to smoke their fishes, leading to the depletion of the
mangroves.
Therefore, at the Pra Estuary,
FoN was being supported under the SFMP to catalyse an active community
conservation effort that included restoration of both mangroves and fisheries
resources, through replanting of depleted mangroves.
The Community members have also
been empowered to institute their own closed season and fisheries and mangrove
resources protected area along the estuary and on parts of the Pra River to
promote fish conservation.
On the Ankobra Estuary, the
Community had been assisted by Hen Mpoano to identify and preserve key mangrove
areas that provided important breeding areas for some species and supported to
replant the degraded mangroves.
Hen Mpoano also provided
technical support to map the degraded mangrove sites and provided logistics to
set up and maintain a mangrove nursery in Ankobra.
The Central and Western
Fishmongers Improvement Association and SFMP are assisting the fishmongers to
adopt best practices towards reducing post-harvest losses and ensuring
improvement in the value chain.
The women at Elmina and Anlo
Beach were also being empowered to adopt hygienic fish handling practices
through the use of Ahotor Oven, an improved fish smoking technology developed
by the Fisheries Commission and SFMP, thereby reducing the high polycyclic
aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) levels in the smoked fish that, hitherto, made it
to be rejected on the EU markets.
Mr Maurice Knight, the Chief of
Party of USAID-SFMP, told the Ghana News Agency that the media event was to
highlight the work of the USAID’s partnership, being rolled out in
collaboration with the Ministry of Fisheries and Aquaculture Development and
the Fisheries Commission.
It was also to increase
collaboration with the media in addressing the challenges facing the sector.
He said through the five-year
partnerships much had been achieved in sustaining and restoring the sector
through the adoption of best practices.
Mr Knight said the SFMP, in its
three and a half-year journey, had been able to design an anti-child labour and
trafficking strategy for the fisheries sector.
He mentioned the national
co-management policy drafted for MoFAD, supporting the revision of the National
Fisheries Act, considering additional weekly non-fishing holiday in
collaboration with the Ghana Canoe Council, and working on closed season during
a fishing reproductive period for August, every year, as some of the
strategies.
Meanwhile, Mr Philip Prah, an
officer of the Friends of the Nation, said their work with community members
within the Pra area including Anlo Beach and Shama Apo in the Western Region
had revealed the readiness of the fisher folk to support efforts at sustaining
the sector.
Both the fishermen and
fishmongers expressed happiness about the SFMP intervention and indicated their
readiness to support efforts at sustaining the fisheries activities in the
country.
GNA

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