“Razzia on the Atlantic”, on Public Senate: how foreign overfishing “steals the fish” from the Senegalese

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Fishermen's canoes along the coast of Senegal.

PUBLIC SENATE – SATURDAY MARCH 11 AT 9:00 P.M. – DOCUMENTARY

“It’s the Europeans, it’s the Asians, it’s them who are impoverishing Africa, it’s them who are stealing fish from Africans! » The invective of Karim Sall, traditional fisherman and trade union leader, is direct. The beauty of the aerial views of multicolored canoes clashes with the environmental and human disaster he denounces: for five decades, by orchestrating overfishing off the Senegalese coast, Europeans, Chinese and Russians have been at the origin of increasing immigration, illegal and often deadly from Africa to Europe.

Read also: Article reserved for our subscribers In Senegal, artisanal fishing weakened by the arrival of Chinese trawlers

For Karim Sall, certain signs do not deceive. This is the first time in his life that this 40-year-old has seen cardboard signs “For Sale” on Senegalese canoes. How did we get here ? The director Nicolas Van Ingen distinguishes four cogs in the gears that led to the endangerment of the “fishing people”.

First, the looting of fisheries resources by foreign fleets since the first Lomé Convention in 1975, which authorized Europeans to fish off Senegal and paved the way for overexploitation in the 1980s and 1990s. If the film does not specify that all the traditional fisheries of the Atlantic coast, including French, are concerned, it points out the inaction of the Senegalese presidents Abdou Diouf (1981-2000) and Abdoulaye Wade (2000-2012) until the campaign 2011 presidential election, during which a new candidate, Macky Sall, gave hope.

Read also: Senegal wants to toughen its laws against pirate fishing

Elected in March 2012, he effectively signed new, more restrictive fishing agreements. But the over-exploiters find a way out with the “Senegalization” of boats (passing under the local flag) – this is the second cog. Illegal fishing (third cog), illustrated by the images of a Russian ship, will be added to it, and, the ultimate cog, enslavement by the fishmeal factories.

Tension with China

The commentary avoids all simplism, as the magnificent views of shorelines, markets and fishing are linked with scenes of clashes, as during the 2019 uprising. Since then, tension has risen a notch between Senegalese fishermen and Chinese, while China now represents the majority of the foreign fishing fleet off West Africa. This did not prevent Macky Sall from welcoming President Xi Jinping in July 2018. “China is doing today what Europe was doing yesterday”underlines the comment, while the academic Tabitha Grace Mallory recalls that China has abolished trawling in its waters.

Read also: Greenpeace accuses Chinese vessels of illegal fishing off Senegal

The fish no longer allowing the men to feed their families, the youngest leave. Some will die, as evidenced by a mother whose son disappeared in the Mediterranean; others will succeed, like Ibrahim, who arrived in France in 2018 and fisherman in Boulogne-sur-Mer (Pas-de-Calais).

Sixty years after the wave of independence, Africa is presented as the continent of the 21ste century. But Western politicians are struggling to find the right tone. Emmanuel Macron thus left for four days, from 1er on March 4, in Gabon, Angola, Congo-Brazzaville and the Democratic Republic of Congo, to redefine “a partnership between France, Europe and the African continent”. “First there was slavery, then colonization. Afterwards, they tried to talk about independence. But we are not independentasserts Karim Sall.

Raid on the Atlantic, documentary by Nicolas Van Ingen (Fr., 2023, 52 min). Broadcast on Public Senate.

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