The Star Malaysia

Fisherman battles poverty with plastic bottle boat

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GAzA City: With hundreds of empty plastic bottles collected from the shores of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, fisherman Muath Abu Zeid has turned litter into a floating source of income.

The Palestinia­n father of four used glue and old nets to bind the bottles into a small fishing boat that he hopes will help him support his family.

Simple but effective, the 700-bottle craft is capable of carrying up to eight people out to sea, according to its 35-year-old skipper.

A broad slab of wood lashed to the top serves as a seat, allowing Muath to row a few hundred metres out from shore – far enough to go fishing.

It takes him about eight hours to pull in five to 7kg of sardines, mullet and other small fish with his rod.

He sells his catch to passers-by on the nearby corniche, making between 20 and 40 shekels ( RM 22-24) a day.

Muath’s younger brothers – Mohammed, 23, and Ashraf, 20 – follow him on his daily excursions. Neither could find work elsewhere.

“I’m a house painter but because of the difficult situation, I’m unemployed,” said skipper Muath, a descendent of refugees from a village near Jaffa in present-day Israel.

“So, this boat has been a lifesaver for me and my family.”

Under a crippling Israeli blockade, Gaza suffers 44% unemployme­nt, rising to a “staggering” 60% among the young, according to 2017 World Bank figures.

The coastal enclave’s electricit­y crisis means sewage is often pumped directly into the sea, leaving its 40km coastline heavily polluted.

Yet many in Gaza depend on fishing for a living, despite Israel enforcing a fishing zone limited to nine nautical miles in the south of the enclave and just six nautical miles in the north, near Israel.

Muath picked up the idea for the boat on YouTube, where he saw hobbyists designing boats using plastic bottles discarded by holidaymak­ers on beaches.

“I appreciate­d the idea and said to myself: ‘ Why not preserve the environmen­t and create a living for me and my family?’ And that’s what happened,” he said.

The craft cost him about US$150 (RM614), borrowed from his father.

He hopes to buy a fishing net soon “so that I can pull in larger amounts of fish, sell them and live a decent life”.

The craft is fragile and he is hemmed in by the frontier with neighbouri­ng Egypt, but he says the waters along the border have plenty of fish waiting to be caught. — AFP

 ??  ?? From litter to lifesaver: Muath and his friends riding on his boat that he made of 70 southern Gaza Strip. —
From litter to lifesaver: Muath and his friends riding on his boat that he made of 70 southern Gaza Strip. —

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