Global Times - Weekend

Egypt’s shrinking ‘sea’ has fishermen worried

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Egypt’s shrinking freshwater “Pharaonic Sea” has residents in its nearly 50 surroundin­g fishing villages worried.

The thin 10,000-square kilometer stretch of water just north of the capital was once part of the Nile River, but shrivellin­g shorelines have left it separated from the country’s main water source for nearly 50 years.

Since then, inhabitant­s in the surroundin­g villages have referred to it as the “dead sea.”

And while its surroundin­g lush vegetation remains, the sea’s steadily declining water levels have fishermen on edge.

The worry has fuelled anxious meetings held by fishermen.

In the village of Kafr Fisha, families live in rhythm with the sea in houses built along the water’s edge.

Like dozens of other fishermen, Sherif, 41, and Khaled, 55, are out of the house and onto the water before dawn. They spend their day on a tiny wooden boat, casting handmade nets into the sea’s brownish green waters.

Dressed in jeans and a sleeveless shirt under the hot summer sun, Sherif carefully frees fish from the nets, placing each one into a small plastic crate.

As the sun begins to dip below the horizon, Khaled sits at the water’s edge and prepares a traditiona­l Egyptian salad that will accompany their dinner of fresh grilled catch.

The Nile’s steadily dipping shorelines have both villagers and officials worried.

The country relies almost entirely on the river for irrigation and drinking water, and authoritie­s are worried a controvers­ial upstream dam underway in neighborin­g Ethiopia could dramatical­ly reduce its flow.

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