Durban fishers demand access to piers
eThekwini municipality says fishers are banned from these spots because they violated City by-laws
- KwaZulu-Natal fishers say they want access to piers from which they have been banned for several years.
- About 100 subsistence fishers marched from the beach promenade to the Durban Amphitheatre on 1 May to demand access to Durban’s piers.
- But he eThekwini municipality says the fishers were banned from the pliers because of littering, public drinking and assaulting surfers with fishing equipment.
KwaZulu-Natal fishers are up in arms over the ban on fishing at most Durban piers.
According to the South Durban Environmental Alliance (SDEA), fishers have been denied access to beachfront piers since 2009 when renovations started for the soccer World Cup. Now fishers across KwaZulu-Natal want to reclaim these spaces.
Thirty-two-year-old Natasha Khan from Phoenix has been fishing with her husband since she was 19. “My husband and I used to fish together at night when he was not working. We mostly rely on the money from fish sales because his part time jobs don’t pay much,” said Khan.
She fishes at Snake Park — the only accredited fishing spot for subsistence fishing — and sells her catch for between R30 and R100, depending on size. She catches blacktail, grunter and salmon. Khan said her 12-year-old daughter joins them when she is not at school.
Khan was among about 100 fishers and their families who marched from the Suncoast beach promenade to the Durban Amphitheatre on 1 May.
Among the group’s main demands are that traditional fishing piers be opened to them immediately, and that security and police officers stop harassing them.
They are also calling on eThekwini Mayor Mxolisi Kaunda and Premier Nomusa Dube to call an urgent meeting to restore traditional fishing areas in the city.
The march last week was organised by the SDEA and the KZN Subsistence Fishing Forum. The Forum says it has more than 25,000 members from Hluhluwe to Port Edward.
Jefferey Naicker, 71, who has been fishing for 60 years, complained that Snake Park was not an ideal spot for fishing. “The place has too much sand.”
“All we want is to be allowed to fish and continue to make a living.”
John Peter Narayanasamy, chairman of the Forum, said that fishing at Snake Park was nearly impossible during low tide. “And when the tide is in, the water crashes over the pier, posing a threat to one’s safety. It also drenches the fisherfolk and washes away their belongings,” he said.
He said pier fishing allowed fishers to cast lines in deeper waters and catch a variety of fish. But he said security guards stationed at piers at night prevent fishers from gaining access.
The SDEA’s Janeira Reddy told GroundUp that since 2009, “about 200 to 300 fisherfolk have been arrested and fined”.
Responding to GroundUp’s questions, eThekwini municipality spokesperson Gugu Sisilana said the City had noted “terrible abuses” at the Bay, North, and Dairy beach piers. This, she said, had led to the prohibition of fishing at these spots.
She said transgressions of bylaws included littering, public drinking, assaults between fishermen, sleeping at the piers, and assaulting surfers with fishing equipment.
“These were raised numerous times with the concerned parties but there was no improvement. Most of the fishermen were also found to not be compliant in terms of the National Environmental Management Act and had no valid licences, catching undersized fish and exceeding the bag limit.”
Sisilana said fishing was still allowed at certain beaches and piers.
Peter Mbelengwa, spokesperson for the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, said a Durban Bay Environmental Monitoring Committee had been established and would look into the grievances of the fishers and try improve their access to resources.
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Letters
Dear Editor
It all started before the 2010 world cup in South Africa. We, the fisher folks, were banned from using the beachfront piers south of Snake Park Pier to Bench Pier. The municipality said we would get to fish again after the world cup, but they lied.
The world cup was over but we fisher folks still weren't allowed on the piers. We took the issue to the municipality but had no luck. The municipality had employees cleaning the area but stopped, and security guards were put in place to prevent folks from fishing. Metro police were also put on the piers to charge the fisher folks that were trying to earn an honest living.
So the municipality has funds to prevent people from earning a living by fishing instead of being a caring and compassionate entity? It does not make sense.
The municipality should show some compassion and allow people to fish with licence and monitor catches using the same people that were used to prevent us from fishing. After all, it's about job creation and sustainability. #LETSWORKTOGETHER.
Dear Editor
This municipality cares not for the livelihood of fisherfolk, some of them subsistence. The excuses raised are well-worn, and those mounted during the apartheid years, largely against Indian fishermen: the agenda then was to keep the beaches white.
This dysfunctional municipality has the habit of riding roughshod over selected targets: ratepayers and these unfortunate fisherfolk.
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