Lebanon’s spearfishers fight to preserve stocks
Awareness-raising tool
TRIPOLI, Lebanon, June 2, (AFP): Hunting fish with spear guns may seem like a counterintuitive way to save Lebanon’s dwindling marine life, but a growing community of freedivers argues it is a potent awareness-raising tool.
At 5:00 am, three men park their car in the northern port of Qalamun. Grabbing their fins, masks and spear guns, they board a boat and set out to sea.
Wrapped in tight camouflage wetsuits as they skim across the silvered water, these amateur underwater hunters resemble their counterparts the world over.
Rachid Zock and his friends say that by promoting regulated spearfishing, they are also defending Lebanon’s fast-depleting aquatic wildlife.
Zock, 38, a freediving and spearfishing instructor, says he has seen Lebanon’s fish populations drop in the three decades he has been exploring its waters.
The divers float, head down on the water like tree leaves. Suddenly, one of them duck dives, piercing the surface as he heads vertically into the blue. Others watch through their masks to make sure he is safe, as he fins a dozen metres (yards) down, clutching his spear gun.
He can stay down for more than two minutes on a single breath.
The fish populations living off Lebanon’s northern coastline have shrunk in recent years, fishermen say.
And the European Commission estimates that 90 percent of fish species surveyed in the Mediterranean are overfished, it said in April 2017 following a study.
The EC launched an initiative with non European Union countries — dubbed MedFish4Ever — to address the issue after a ministerial conference last year.
But Lebanon, which had 7,000 fishermen in 2014 and where fishing only makes up a tiny part of the economy, has not signed up.
Faysal Tawokji, 25, says he has been diving to set up underwater fish traps every day for 12 years.
His income has not improved since.
Hilal
Pollution
Retired fisherman Hassan Mallat, 74, says Lebanon’s fish stocks are hit by pollution, bad practices and overfishing.
Spearfishing instructor Zock says that, when treated properly, the sea’s resources replenish themselves.
He gives the example of July 2006, when a war between Lebanese militia Hezbollah and neighbouring Israel rocked the country.
The instructor started the Freedive Lebanon club alone, but by 2017 it had 90 members, he says.
He insists that all members have a spearfishing licence, which comes on condition that catching fish at night, or using any machine, is forbidden.
After an hour of diving, the spearfishermen have still not caught anything, and move to another spot.
Soon, one of them fins up to the surface with the first catch of the day, a large glistening brown fish with rounded side fins.
Beyond their community, Zock and his fellow aquatic enthusiasts also do their best to speak to fishermen about preserving Lebanon’s underwater wildlife.
Several times a year, as egg-laying approaches for different species, they invite fishermen to awareness sessions. But not all of them are receptive, Zock says. Some fishermen “stand against our campaigns because they insist on grabbing everything they can as fast as possible,” he adds.
Lebanese law bans dynamite and poison fishing, while also since July 2010 regulating the size of fishing nets, but many complain those rules are not enforced.
Abdulkader Alameddin, the mayor of Mina’s Tripoli district, says bad practices by a few have affected the livelihoods of all fishermen.
All the municipality can do is “hand recommendations to concerned departments based on fishermen’s complaints,” he says. But with no law enforcement, the problem persists, says Zock.
Sitting in his boat, fisherman Khaled Salloum, 50, admits his tightly knotted net is prohibited.
Four hours have elapsed. One of the amateur freedivers guts and cleans the only catch of the day.
“We got our fish today,” says Jamal Hilal, flinging its guts and scales into the water.
“It’s time to give back to the sea.”
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