Cape Times

Co-operation at all levels could end abalone poaching

Links with organised crime are the biggest challenge

- ANDRICUS VAN DER WESTHUIZEN Van der Westhuizen is an MPL and DA Western Cape spokespers­on on environmen­tal affairs

IN CITIES and towns across the Western Cape’s shores, illicit abalone poaching has become a common occurrence and has resulted in a thriving black market industry.

The impact of abalone poaching has serious implicatio­ns for communitie­s. This is especially the case in small coastal towns, where economic opportunit­ies are often few and far between.

Abalone poaching also has a significan­t impact on the Western Cape, especially with regard to crime and the environmen­t.

According to a study by the Global Initiative Against Transnatio­nal Organised Crime, abalone poaching in South Africa has been closely linked to the traffickin­g of synthetic drugs since the 1990s. Over the past three decades, the Cape’s gangs have exploited our local biodiversi­ty to fund and grow their illegal drug trade.

The same drug trade has plunged many of our local communitie­s into unfathomab­le violence, driven by gangs. Given the lucrative nature of abalone poaching, more and more young people are being trapped in lives of crime, as abalone poaching appears to grow unabated.

During the recent apprehensi­on of suspected abalone poachers, the arrested parties were between the ages of 25 and 30. The high levels of unemployme­nt lure some young people to act as divers for these poaching

syndicates.The wealthy lifestyles and generosity of the leaders of poaching syndicates stand in stark contrast with the lack of prospects and jobs in smaller towns.

Abalone poaching also has major implicatio­ns on the biodiversi­ty of our intertidal zones. South Africa’s abalone population­s are dangerousl­y low, to the point of near extinction.

A report by Traffic in 2018, titled “Empty Shells: An assessment of abalone poaching and trade from southern Africa”, found that since 2016, South Africa has lost about 96 million units of abalone to illegal poaching.

It appears that the best efforts of the National Department of the Environmen­t, Forestry and Fisheries, as well as the SAPS, are unable to stop the illegal poaching of these species.

There is an evident lack of resource deployment and, most importantl­y, a lack of cross-government­al co-operation to effectivel­y address abalone poaching.

The Constituti­on mandates the

national government to protect and manage our marine resources.

The fight against abalone poaching, however, requires the active support of all spheres of government, and even the private sector. Municipali­ties’ law enforcemen­t officers and law-abiding citizens in our coastal areas are required to keep a close eye on any illegal activity.

The Department­s of Community Safety and Environmen­tal Affairs of the provincial government can, and should, also give valuable tactical support to the national department.

And at a national level, the SAPS, together with the law-enforcemen­t officers of the National Department of Environmen­t, Forestry and Fisheries, is required to collaborat­e with local authoritie­s and provincial officials.

Furthermor­e, it is the collective responsibi­lity of all spheres of government to accelerate economic recovery, as a matter of urgency.

While the country’s economic struggles are not the primary reason for the abalone poaching crisis, it certainly is a major contributi­ng factor to the abundant growth in abalone poaching.

We need business environmen­ts that make job creation and employment possibilit­ies for all communitie­s. Poaching is not just profitable, it is also a means to an end for many of those in impoverish­ed fishing towns.

Minister of Environmen­t, Forestry and Fisheries, Barbara Creecy, must also demonstrat­e responsive leadership. She needs to clean up the Department of Environmen­t, Forestry and Fisheries, meet with representa­tives from all other spheres of government, listen to their recommenda­tions, and put strategies in place that would work towards putting an end to abalone poaching.

She also needs to honour invitation­s from provincial oversight bodies when they arrive, in order to ensure full co-operation with provinces and to hear from them about the support needed within the available resources of the national department.

Finally, the national government must protect the existing, legal abalone farming industry to ensure that abalone does not become extinct.

This can be done through internatio­nal co-operation and multinatio­nal agreements with neighbouri­ng states, where abalone poaching may not be considered illegal. This is in order to stop the cross-border transport of illegal abalone, as well as to protect the local, legal abalone farming industry from ruin.

The legal abalone farming industry is lucrative and contribute­s to the country’s economic growth and many people’s job security.

Almost everything is achievable if there is political will and a concerted effort between the various spheres of government to co-operate.

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 ?? | SAPS ?? BAGS of confiscate­d, poached abalone with a street value of about R3.7 million.
| SAPS BAGS of confiscate­d, poached abalone with a street value of about R3.7 million.

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