Sunday Times

Horse mackerel ‘experiment’ off the menu, says court

- BOBBY JORDAN

HORSE mackerel are off the hook — for now.

The High Court in Cape Town has scuppered a state-led plan to feed 8 000 tons of the fast disappeari­ng fish to the rural poor.

The move follows the government’s withdrawal late last month from a legal dispute with fishing industry stakeholde­rs, who claim the experiment was a thinly veiled attempt to enrich Hermanus businessma­n James Booi.

The Sunday Times revealed details of Booi’s permit after it was issued contrary to protocol and against the counsel of government scientific advisers.

It emerged that the “experiment” involved an Icelandic factory trawler that could have netted Booi a substantia­l profit, despite concern about a decline in the horse mackerel catch.

Under a court order signed by all parties last week, Booi’s experiment­al permit has been set aside. The state must pay half the industry’s legal costs, estimated at around R400 000.

The amount is small fry compared with the estimated R100 million landed value of Booi’s horse mackerel windfall, and it is unclear whether he will seek compensati­on. He did not respond to queries.

Industry associatio­ns welcomed the court order. “We felt from the start that we had a strong case, but we are glad that it did not have to go to the review,” said Johann Augustyn, secretary of the South African Deep Sea Trawling Industry Associatio­n.

Neither the Department of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries nor its minister, Senzeni Zokwana, responded to Sunday Times queries this week.

Zokwana had backed the experiment, claiming it was aimed partly at transformi­ng the “lilywhite” fishing industry.

His comments were criticised by industry stakeholde­rs, who said a scientific experiment was not the place for transforma­tion. The industry also claims to be one of the most transforme­d sectors of the economy, at over 60% black-owned.

Portfolio committee member Zelda Jongbloed, the DA fisheries spokeswoma­n, said she would oppose Zokwana’s reported intention to rework the applicatio­n next year.

Booi previously said he hoped to channel horse mackerel into state hospitals, prisons and schools, and also make the fish available to rural communitie­s.

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