Feb 23, 2008 (LBO) – Sri Lanka's coastal
fisheries and coral reefs are being destroyed by a rapid rise in
dynamite blasted 'fishing', with the lucrative practice now
exploding into an organized crime involving big money, officials
said.
Dyanamite fishing is a destructive way of
killing fish by setting off explosives underwater so that the
resulting shock waves kill fish in a vast surrounding area.
Dynamite Mafia
Though first started by some fishermen in
isolated areas a few decades ago, the practice is now being
bank-rolled by a rapidly growing mafia from outside the
traditional fisher community.
Traditional fishermen and officials say the
'dynamite mafia' has now perfected a system which they put into
practice with assembly line precision.
Underwater photos obtained by LBO from an
eyewitness, shows the entire crime sequence in action.
First a small boat goes over a fishing ground
unobtrusively dropping primed sticks of dynamite.
Sometime later a second boat comes and drops
scuba divers nearby who stealthily start collecting the dead
fish in gunny bags.
A boat then comes again to pick up the gunny
bags.
Officials say the practice is now spreading
beyond the coastal waters.
"In the early days it has been done by the small
scale fishermen," Champa Ameresinghe, a marine biologist from
the National Aquatic Resources Development Agency (NARA) told
ETV's Money Report program.
"Now it is like an organized crime. They do it
in the open sea also. For example in the Puttalam area and the
Kalpitiya area they even use it on encircling nets when they
cannot control the school.
"Only about half the fish is collected."
In the coastal areas especially from Beruwala to
Hikkaduwa dynamiting among the coral reefs is now being
bank-rolled by businessmen from outside the traditional fisher
community.
Dangerous Game
Most fishermen are too scared to speak openly,
fearing reprisals from the dynamite mafia. But some are willing
to take the risk after seeing their livelihoods being destroyed.
"Around 10 to 12 boats come each day from
Weligama, Midigama, and Mirissa and drop dynamite," says W M
Gunapala, a traditional fishermen from near Galle.
"After they drop not a fish is left in the whole
area. Not a creature comes near the shore then, leave alone
fish."
The percussion destroys the internal organs of
fish and other marine fauna killing them instantly.
"Everything – fish, other marine animals, fish
eggs – is destroyed," says C D Nagahawatte from Sri Lanka's
fisheries ministry office in the southern coastal town of Galle.
"It's like a bomb," explains Amerasekera. "All
internal organs are damaged."
Coral polyps die in blast sites. Divers say
blasted areas could be easily recognized from the dead coral and
lifeless barnacles.
Criminal Attraction
There are stiff penalties for dynamite fishing
which was outlawed in Sri Lank in 1996.
"Any wrongdoer caught will be fined 100,000
rupees and his goods will be confiscated," says Nagahawatte.
"For a second offence he will be given a jail
sentence of up to five years."
But the practice is continuing and gaining
ground. The current high price of fish is another magnet for
business interests to make a quick buck.
"The price is good and a lot of fish can be
caught unlike when using a net to fish," observes Dharmasena
Jayasekara, another traditional fisherman from near Galle.
Knowledgeable persons say that a person who
helps in a dynamite boat can earn 3,000 rupees a day compared to
500 rupees for a diver or fishing boat. Even inexperienced
labourers could now earn more than an experienced fisherman.
Though some fishermen allege that police is
turning a blind eye, everyone agrees that law enforcement
authorities have a genuine problem to find cash to hire boats
and patrol the seas or even act on tip-offs.
Increasingly larger volumes of fish that is now
turning up on shop counters and supermarkets are now actually
dynamited fish.
Officials say an experienced person can easily
identify dynamited fish from the air bladders that have burst
and eyes that have come out. Other signs to look out for are
bloodshot eyes, and bloodshot areas in the belly of the fish.