My bit of earth in the sun

Christine Suchen Lim, Straits Times 10 Aug 08;

Singapore may now be a gleaming jewel, but it is her ancient voice and earthy quality that I love

Neither the People's Action Party Government nor my parents could claim her for me. It was the sea and the trees that did it. And an ancient voice beneath Singapore's skin of modernity.

I was 14 and miserable when I first stepped off the train at the railway station in Keppel Road. Singapore was not the smart little red dot and global city that she is today. She was a frowsy woman with unkempt hair infested with lice. An urban, brown sprawl of shophouses.

Everywhere I looked, there were houses, and no trees. Decrepit shophouses crowded Tanjong Pagar and Chinatown, crammed with people, spilling out onto the pavements and covered walkways. Mothers and grandmothers - with babies and toddlers strapped to their backs - washed, cooked, ate, quarrelled and cursed the world, the Government and one another.

The covered walkways of Chinatown were noisy public rooms by day, and dormitories by night when homeless old folk and unmarried males slept on makeshift beds of planks and cardboard. Large brown rats scuttled along the drains, inches away from the feet of diners having supper.

Besides the rats, stray cats, dogs and gangsters ruled Chinatown. Each time my stepfather parked his car there, he had to pay an urchin to guard it if he didn't want it vandalised. I did not feel safe. In my teenage imagination, Singapore was a city of rats and gangsters.

Her physical geography was also unimpressive. There were no hills in the city's skyline. Having grown up on the green isle of Penang in the shadow of Penang Hill, I missed the pale view of blue hills on the horizon.

Fortunately, I was sent to Katong Convent, which was by the sea then. My daily morning walk along the beach, from the former Odeon cinema to the back gate of the school, pulled me out of misery. Trees shaded the beach. Wild grass, creepers and bushes grew haphazardly. The winding sandy path did not hurry me to my destination, the way a straight concrete path tends to do.

As the sun rose over the sea, Malay fishermen trawled the shallow waters with hand-held nets for shrimp and fish. The peace and quiet of that daily scene comforted a confused and rebellious 14-year-old who had to adapt to a new family, a new school and a new country.

Looking back, I believe I first learnt to love Singapore when I walked by the sea under the angsana trees every morning. That quiet place touched me somewhere beyond my rational brain. It reached into my soul, perhaps it was my intuition, I don't know, but it spoke to me. That quiet place became my bit of earth in the sun when I was 14, and hated this island.

Feelings take form

Quiet places and nature can shape our feelings for land and country, far more than national campaigns and national education policies. Far more than even our national favourite hawker food. If there were no more Hainanese chicken rice, laksa or char kway teow, would you still come back if you and your family were living overseas?

Let's do a striptease. Strip Singapore of her jewellery. First, remove her shopping malls and places of civic pride. Remove everything lauded 'world class' by the mass media. Next, remove all her 'M's - MM, SM, PM and the entire Cabinet of ministers. Then, strip her of her prosperity. Clothe her in poverty. So poor that she could not afford to stage National Day Parades. Would you still love her then? Would you?

I would, because I have heard her ancient voice in the quiet places like that sea and that beach along the East Coast 46 years ago. And that ancient voice was not the voice of Stamford Raffles or Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew.

It was the voice of an ancient island once known as Temasek and Singapura, once a part of the ancient kingdoms of Majapahit and Sri Vijaya, once the bit of rock on which our forefathers found a foothold and hammered out a living.

That voice has been muted for years by the pressure of our modernity. That shallow sea and beach have since become the bustling neighbourhood of Marine Parade, and Katong Convent is no longer by the sea. The sea has been filled and reclaimed.

The two pictures of urban mess and rustic peace that I have painted above encapsulate the gains and losses we have experienced as a people. The urban mess is gone. In its place, we have gained a gleaming city, but lost our quiet places, lost the spontaneity of our greenery and our sense of the ancient and sacred in nature.

Our children see nature in neat grids, rows of trees and bushes planted at regular intervals. Sometimes, I wonder if this planned orderliness was designed to reflect our political control or whether it was an unplanned by-product of it. Grids remind us of boundaries.

In the 1970s, I lived in Ang Mo Kio. From my window on the 10th floor, I looked down on a path of beaten earth, zigzagging across the open space of neatly planted grass. That crooked path gave me hope at a time when many of my friends had left Singapore because they could not stand the tight political control then.

I, who did not leave, clung to the hope that this crooked path gave me. A path of beaten earth, made by anonymous feet that quietly went off tangent; feet that refused to follow the straight-as-the-crow-flies concrete path built by the authorities.

That path taught me a lesson. An authority can dictate a path, but it does not necessarily mean that we can't walk off tangent and create our own path. And sing our own song.

In the 1980s, at the height of the Speak Mandarin campaign, I overheard two cleaners, an Indian woman and a Chinese woman, sitting in a quiet corner of the Bukit Timah campus. They were sharing bread and feeding the birds, chatting in a mix of pasar Malay and the Hokkien and Teochew dialects.

Formal education does not encourage this inter-language mixing. And yet, it is often this willingness to mix (or campur-campur) languages that helps us bridge race, language and culture to connect with others.

The two cleaners showed me that, if hearts were willing, words would be forged in the smithy of willing hearts to connect regardless of campaigns.

We, Singaporeans, are creative in mixing words from different languages. Just listen to our street lingo be it Singlish, pasar Malay or pasar Mandarin. Our linguistic mix-and-match creativity is spontaneous, often mischievous. No law can outlaw our people's creative tongues.

A quiet place, a crooked path and two cleaners make me proud of the earthy Singapore beneath the one adorned with 'world class' jewellery.

She is the one I love when I speak of land and country. Hers is the voice that our writers and poets hear in quiet places, when we listen not to the news, but to the songs and stories embedded in this bit of earth.

For what is homeland
In which we planted
Our hopes, lives,
Dreams and memories?
But a bit of earth.

The writer is the author of Fistful Of Colours, which won the Singapore Literature Prize, and A Bit Of Earth, a novel shortlisted for the same prize. Her latest book is The Lies That Build A Marriage.


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Singapore island hopping

Go offshore for a day, yet leave your passport at home.
Straits Times 10 Aug 08;

PULAU UBIN

Cycling: A popular choice. Full-day bike rentals are available from $2 at kiosks stationed just after the jetty.

Trekking: Check out the Sensory Trail by NParks, featuring a walk through the Chek Jawa area, famous for diverse wildlife. To get the best out of your walk, go during low tide. Tidal information available at www.nparks.gov.sg or call 6542-4108 for general inquiries.

Eco tours: On every last Sunday of the month, volunteers from nature group Naked Hermit Crabs hold free tours of Chek Jawa. For details, visit nakedhermitcrabs.blogspot.com

Getting there: Take a bumboat from Changi Jetty at Changi Village. Rides cost $2.50 per person, one way.

PULAU SEMAKAU

What to do: A host of activities such as fishing, inter-tidal walks, bird watching and stargazing can be done, but they are accessible to various interest groups only on approval by the National Environment Agency. For details, call 6862-0480 or visit www.nea.gov.sg

Tip: All is not lost for small groups and families. During the month of November, the agency holds an open house as part of its programme for Clean and Green Singapore www.cgs.org.sg .

Ferry transport and tour of the island will be provided free for interested parties. Look out for announcements by the end of the month on the CGS website. Online registration is available on the agency's website.

KUSU ISLAND

What to do: The island offers swimming lagoons and generally, a nice spot for a day of sun and sand. Nature-lovers can sign up for a ReefWalk with conservation group Blue Water Volunteers, during low tides once a month. The cost of the walk is $15 per participant. For details, visit www.bluewatervolunteers.org

Getting there: Take a ferry from Marina South Pier. Return tickets cost $15 for adults and $12 for children aged one to 12 years old. Ticket prices may vary slightly during the annual Kusu pilgrimage season from Sept 29 to Oct 28. For details, call 1800-SENTOSA (736-8672) or visit www.sentosa.com.sg

Links to more

Visiting our shores on the wildsingapore website.

Wild happenings in Singapore latest nature happenings for the week, updated weekly


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Water sports at Pasir Ris: Club heeds NEA guidelines

Letter from PA, Sunday Times 10 Aug 08;

I refer to last Sunday's article, 'Pasir Risk Beach?'.

We wish to clarify that the National Environment Agency (NEA) guidelines advise against water activities that involve full-body contact with the water at Pasir Ris Beach.

The People's Association Water-Venture at Pasir Ris, which offers kayaking and sailing courses and activities, fully complies with these guidelines.

In addition to mandatory water-safety briefings, since the issuance of the NEA's advisory on July31, Water-Venture has updated all its trainers and participants about the NEA's guidelines prior to each activity.

Swimming and capsize drills, which involve full-body contact with water and are required as part of kayaking and sailing courses, are conducted at other Water-Venture outlets.

Tan Mong Kiang
Assistant Director (Recreation)
for Chief Executive Director
People's Association


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Best of our wild blogs: 10 Aug 08

Reef Celebrations! A flurry of blog entries about the celebrations


Naked Boardwalk tours in the news
and a plea on the adventures with the naked hermit crabs blog

Crimson Sunbird: Adult and juvenile male plumage
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog


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Globalization Is Destroying the World's Oceans

Thomas Schulz, Spiegel Online 8 Aug 08;

The oceans are a primary source of food for mankind, and fishing provides 200 million people with income, as meager as it may be. But growing demand and the industrial-scale exploitation of the seas are destroying global fish populations. The European Union's quota system is partly to blame.

Dawn creeps across the horizon as the Pinkis brothers' cutter returns to the harbor at Kühlungsborn. The Baltic is still calm, but wind from the northeast has already picked up sharply, a sign of the storms in the evening forecast. The Pinkis brothers and their crew have been out since 2 a.m., 10 nautical miles off the coast of northeast Germany's Mecklenburg region, in a spot where they had staked hundreds of nets into the sea floor the previous afternoon, hoping the fish would come.

The brothers' cutter is small, less than 10 meters (33 feet) long, with a tiny bridge on top and a large fish tank in the hold below. Two stake-net fishermen stand on the deck, wearing bright orange oilcloth clothing. The boat has hardly docked at the wharf before they begin shoveling the catch from the hold, mostly flounder and codfish, even a lone turbot. The catch amounts to 200 kilograms (440 lbs), the fruits of a day's labor -- a day that can sometimes last 20 hours. Six days a week.

They're the only fishermen docked in Kühlungsborn harbor this morning, a lone cutter among sailboats and yachts. The fishing harbors along Germany's coast have been emptied. There are about 3,700 ocean fishermen left in Germany today, many of them getting on in years. The Pinkis brothers are among the youngest members of the Wismarbucht fishing cooperative. Uwe Pinkis is 45, and his brother Klaus is 42. Fishing, in Germany, is a dying profession.

When Klaus Pinkis is asked whether it's possible to make a living from 200 kilos of fish a day, he puts down his dip net, pushes his cap up from his forehead and takes a deep breath. He looks at his brother for a long moment and says: "We're doing well, but there are others, many, in fact, who are getting really nervous and are on the verge of qualifying for welfare."

The Pinkis brothers are their own supply chain. They catch, process and sell the fish themselves in the courtyard behind their tidy little house just off the beach in Rerik, a town in the Salzhaff region of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania in the northeasten corner of Germany. "The more you do, the more you keep," says Klaus Pinkis. His brother nods. The two men are proud of what they do for a living.

Together, they gross €60,000 ($93,000) a year. No one does this just for the money, says Uwe Pinkis. The work is too grueling, especially in bad weather, when the cutter "rocks back and forth like crazy all day long" and when the brothers "consume nothing but magnesium all evening" to deal with cramps in their calves. Fishing is not just a dying profession but a difficult one.

Overfished, Overexploited

About one-fourth of all known fish populations are already overfished to the brink of extinction, including once-abundant species cod and tuna. According to the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), another 50 percent are considered completely exploited. No one can, or is even willing, to predict the consequences for the complex ecosystem, and yet it is clear that the oceans are gradually being ravaged.

Is this all just fear-mongering? Environmentalist propaganda? No, not at all.

German Environment Minister Sigmar Gabriel soberly expressed what scientists have been convinced about for years: If the oceans continue to be ransacked the way they are today, fish populations, and fishing along with them, will disappear -- completely, worldwide -- by the middle of the century.

The news from last week alone was alarming: US authorities had, for the first time ever, imposed a ban on salmon fishing along the country's entire Pacific coast. The European Union also banned tuna fishing in the Mediterranean, while experts recommended banning cod fishing in the North Sea.

Even the Institute of the German Economy, not exactly a leftist bastion of environmentalism, has issued urgent warnings that an entire "branch of industry is literally threatened with extinction."

Billions of people depend on fish as a staple food and need it to survive, especially in parts of the Third World, where fish makes up 20 percent of the diet and is thus the key source of animal protein. Fishing provides an income for close to 200 million people.

The demand for fish has been rising steadily and steeply for decades, and fisherman do nothing but satisfy that demand. As boats have become larger and more efficient, the worldwide catch volume has grown more than sevenfold between 1950 and 2005, to more than 140 million tons a year.

The consequences were recognizable early on, especially in the waters of industrialized nations, with their well-equipped fleets and well-heeled consumers. In the North Sea and Baltic Sea, for example, herring populations were in dramatic decline by the 1960s.

Germans, in particular, have felt the effects. Today there are only half as many ocean fishermen in a united Germany as there were in West Germany alone in 1970. In the '80s, fewer than 30 deep-sea fishing vessels from Germany ventured to Greenland (instead of fishing off the North Sea and Baltic Sea coastlines). Today there are seven, and only one is not owned by foreign corporations.

That vessel, the "Atlantic Peace," is 57 meters (187 feet) long, has a crew of 24, and is currently wedged between two container ships along the quay wall. Streaks of rust mar the ship's once gleaming, blue-and-white paint finish. This last German deep-sea fishing boat is no attractive cutter, but a steel vessel so powerful that its crew can even work in eight-meter (26-foot) waves.

The morning lights of Reykjavik shimmer through wisps of fog in the background. It took the "Atlantic Peace" two days to struggle back from its fishing grounds to the Icelandic capital, the base for North Atlantic fishing vessels, in storm-force winds.

Captain Klaus Hartmann, his face showing signs of exhaustion, stands on the bridge. It is six a.m. and raining heavily. "When is the container finally going to get here?" he asks, staring at the rear deck. A crane lifts pallets from the hold, each tightly packed with boxes full of black halibut. The catch totals more than 400,000 fish, cleaned and trimmed, frozen and packaged for sale. The "Atlantic Peace" is a factory ship.

It was at sea for 70 days, a highly efficient catching and processing machine that only docks in the harbor to spit out cargo as quickly as possible. It will sail again in three days, headed for fishing zone XIVb off the coast of Greenland once again, where the Germans have traditionally had large quotas.

Why Greenland, of all places? "Because Germans have always fished there," says Hartmann. The European Union pays Greenland more than €40 million ($61 million) each year so that they can continue to do so.

Documented catches from earlier days are the basis of the quota system. Because the British caught the most cod in the North Sea before there were any regulations, the EU assigns them the largest quotas each year. And because the Spaniards have always fished for anchovies in the Mediterranean, they are permitted to do so today.

When a fish species suddenly turns up in ocean regions where there was no quota for that species in the past, it sets off a mad rush. Last year, for example, a new ocean perch population was discovered northeast of Iceland. The relevant regulatory agency issued a quota for 15,000 tons. Then the race began. It's called "Olympic fishing." Whoever manages to catch the most fish as quickly as possible emerges as the winner -- two times over, because future quotas for individual ships are based on this first catch.

Part 2: 'Everything Was Gone'

More than 70 boats descended on the schools of ocean perch. "Everything was gone within two weeks," says Hartmann, who disapproves of the practice.

Hartmann is also the chairman of the Association of German Deep-Sea Fisheries. He is familiar with the problems surrounding the current reputation of fishermen, including their supposedly relentless greed for the catch and their lack of concern for the environment.

This is why he spends a lot of time talking about fishing practices designed to preserve populations and about the need to cooperate with scientists and environmentalists. He says restrictions are indispensable, "for reasons of conscience," but also for economic reasons. "I still want to have this job in 20 years. That'll only happen if there are still fish."

When he talks about such changes, Hartmann uses expressions like "paradigm shift" and "ethical necessity." He is not your stereotypical seaman, not someone who, with a deeply tanned face and hands battered by the elements, likes to tell fishermen's yarns. Sometimes he seems almost out of place on the bridge, peering at his laptop through his angular designer glasses. There is a stark contrast between Hartmann and his surroundings where, despite the open doors, there is an unbearably rancid stench, a fatal mix of fish, machine oil and old sweat.

Hartmann didn't even grow up on the coast, but in Cologne. He bought his first cutter in 1977 for 100,000 German marks, using money borrowed from friends. Since then his ships have become a little larger every few years. The "Atlantic Peace," which Hartmann bought used seven years ago for 18 million German marks, is his crowning achievement.

But Hartmann hasn't gone out himself in years. These days he prefers to leave the fishing up to his partners. The "Atlantic Peace" is a limited partnership consisting of three captains. One has to stay on land, says Hartmann, "to make sure that we weren't put out of business, as a one-ship operation." The threats to his business include the EU bureaucracy, competitors who often operate dozens of ships, and market fluctuations that stopped having anything to do with daily prices at the fish auction in the port city of Bremerhaven long ago, but instead are determined by exchange rate fluctuations between the yen and the dollar.

Two weeks before the "Atlantic Peace" entered the port of Reykjavik, Hartmann had sold its entire catch -- 19,851 boxes of black halibut, with a little ocean perch mixed in -- for a price of €1.4 million ($2.14 million), negotiated with a Danish wholesaler that primarily supplies Asian food companies.

Hartmann does well when fish is in short supply in Japanese supermarkets, because he's paid more money for his halibut. His business does poorly when the Chinese economy falters, because that prompts the Chinese to shift from buying Hartmann's expensive ocean perch to cheap fish from Vietnam. But one thing is constant: Not a single fish caught by the last German deep-sea fishing vessel goes to Germany.

Globalization has reached the fishing industry in full force. "Anyone who doesn't recognize this," says Hartmann, "is quickly out of the picture."

Germans Prefer it Frozen

For most domestic fishermen, selling their catch in Germany is no longer worth the trouble. These days they supply only 15 percent of the fish on German supermarket shelves. This is not for any lack of demand: Germans are eating more fish every year, with per capita consumption up to 16 kilos (35 lbs.), a 20-percent increase over ten years ago. But Germany is a country of inexpensive fish, where even twice-frozen packaged fish, once spurned, is a top seller. One variety is Alaskan pollock, caught by Russian trawlers, frozen, sent to China to be filleted, refrozen and then shipped off to German supermarkets.

Hartmann gets €3.37 ($5.16) for a kilo of halibut. This is decent, but less than the going rate for cod, which has become rare. Because cod can only be sold in filet form, two-thirds of the catch volume is discarded. In the case of halibut, on the other hand, heads and fins are used. "The Chinese go for that," says Hartmann.

These factors make it worthwhile to target black halibut, "even though it's damned hard to fish." Black halibut swims at great depths, down to 1,500 meters (4,920 feet), and it takes an experienced captain as well as sonar, plotters and 3D underwater monitors to fish it up.

The bridge of the "Atlantic Peace" is reminiscent of a navy frigate more than a fishing boat. Deep-sea fishing today is equal parts high tech and manual labor: Hardly any fish in the ocean is safe anymore.

Traveling at two or three knots, the "Atlantic Peace" drags a long (70-meter) net across the ocean floor, even through drifting ice and during storms. Halibut sweeps into a giant net opening, which is 30 meters (98 feet) wide and 12 meters (40 feet) tall. After only half an hour, up to 20 tons of fish can be crowded into the end of the net. The net has to be reeled in after four hours, "otherwise the fish are quickly limp and descaled."

A giant stern winch pulls up the net. The process can take up to 30 minutes, and then the catch -- tens of thousands of fish squeezed into the green net, with mesh no smaller than 140 millimeters, to let young fish escape -- is brought on deck. The crew quickly opens the net and lets the fish slide down to their deaths. The entire lower deck of the "Atlantic Peace" is a processing factory consisting of metal conveyor belts and flashing circular saws.

When the fishing is good, the machines run 24 hours a day, performing an endless cycle of beheading, gutting and freezing. There is no daylight on the lower deck. It's a cold, crowded space with an unsteady floor. Working in this on-board processing plant is a back-breaking job, no matter how much technology there is to make it easier.

A seaman can earn €5,000 ($7,650) a month for the work -- good money, and yet the industry lacks new blood. "The aging workforce is a problem" says Hartmann, adding that some ships are practically manned with retirees.

Meaningless Quotas

There is still money to be made in fishing. The "Atlantic Peace" grosses about €8 million ($12.2 million) a year, while returns fluctuate between one and 15 percent. The industry will remain profitable for as long as the quotas exist, but that could change any year. Hartmann always carries around the EU's most current quota distribution list, in the form of a huge Excel table, dozens of columns that reflect, in condensed form, EU fishing policies.

There is a number for every country, every fishing zone, every fish species and every boat or fleet. According to the table, the "Atlantic Peace" is entitled to a quota of 4,500 tons of halibut, cod, Pollock, ocean perch and shellfish.

But with the exception of the total catch volume, the numbers are meaningless. Fishermen trade with one another, depending on what types of fish they specialize in. Hartmann, for example, has just traded his 800 tons of cod off the Norwegian coast for 600 tons of halibut from an Icelandic vessel off Greenland.

The quotas are revised each year, in months of negotiations among the EU countries and with their neighbors. "We never know what'll happen," says Hartmann, "and if things don't go our way, we can end up with only half as much fish the next year."

Part 3: Pirate Fishermen and Big Multinationals

Unlike Norwegians or Icelanders, EU fishermen are not involved in the negotiations. Politicians and bureaucrats get together to set the quotas.

In 2007, German fishermen were allotted 225,000 tons. The quota, which belongs to the German government and not the fishermen, is essentially lent to them.

In Iceland, as in many other fishing nations, this is handled differently. The Icelandic quota is owned by the fishermen, which gives them competitive advantages when it comes to planning and securing financing. Icelandic fishing companies have expanded for years, buying up bigger and bigger fleets and increasing their market share.

Deutsche Fischfang Union, based in the northern German port city of Cuxhaven, was once Germany's largest deep-sea fishing company. Today it belongs to Samherji, an Icelandic company, which also owns fleets in Poland, England and Spain. A slow but constant wave of consolidations has rolled across the fishing industry for years. The number of players is decreasing, but those that remain are getting bigger, more global and more powerful. This is bad news for the millions of small family fishing operations. Today, one percent of the world fishing fleet is already responsible for 50 percent of the catch.

Last summer Samherji acquired a fleet of six factory ships just so that it could fish the West African coast. The EU pays Mauritania more than €80 million ($122 million) a year so European industrial fishing companies can drain the African coastal waters of fish. In many cases, this doesn't leave Mauritanian fisherman with enough to make a living. Others, like the Dutch fishing corporation Parlevliet & Van de Plas, are already sending their ships to locations deep in the South Atlantic and off the coasts of Chile and Peru.

More and more often, the global struggle for dwindling resources is turning violent. French longline fishermen are attacking Spanish drift net fishermen with Molotov cocktails, accusing them of depleting their fishing grounds. English fishermen have taken to throwing frozen fish at Icelandic coast guard vessels. And German stake-net fishermen are at each other's throats in the Baltic for fishing to close to one another.

But at least all can agree that they have one common enemy: pirate fishermen. They catch without licenses, without quotas and without paying any heed to a global fisheries policy designed to preserve populations. The so-called IUU, or "illegal, unregistered and unregulated" fishing industry, already pulls about one third of the world's annual catch from the sea.

"Unfortunately the IUU is in fact out of control in some areas," says Stefán Ásmundsson. He is the chairman of the North East Atlantic Fisheries Commission (NEAFC), whose members include the EU and most of the other countries that fish in this ocean region. Similar multinational organizations also exist in other ocean regions. They represent an attempt to manage fishing in largely unregulated international waters. This only works if countries abide by the rules, but many don't.

"The problem is that, under international maritime law, enforcing the rules is up to the flag state of the fishermen," says Ásmundsson. And many deliberately enforce no rules at all. More than 1,200 fishing trawlers are registered under flags of convenience -- Cambodia, say, or Honduras. Another 1,600 trawlers, the pirate fishermen, sail the oceans under no flags at all.

Many pirate fishermen are known and their ships are on blacklists. But in international waters they can simply forbid inspectors from coming on board.

This is why the international community is increasingly trying to forbid the pirates access to ports, make it impossible for them to unload their fish, and deny them food and diesel fuel. But even these sanctions don't always work.

The five biggest trawlers owned by Piro-Fisch, a German-Russian charter company, were long known as impudent pirates when they entered the port of Rostock in northeastern Germany in the fall of 2005. They are on all relevant blacklists. But the ships remained untouched -- despite the fact that even the Icelandic foreign minister asked the EU Commission to prevent them from leaving the port. The trawlers left Rostock in March 2006, unobstructed and with their supplies on board. In April, after another raid, they entered the Russian seaport of Kaliningrad, where they were promptly detained.

Even in legal fishery, politicians often fail to live up to their responsibility. The EU's cod quotas, for example, are still 50 percent higher than the catch volumes scientists consider barely justifiable. Sharp disputes keep erupting in the EU because some countries, instead of fishing less, push to have their quotas raised.

The problem stems from the fact that in traditionally strong fishing nations, like France and Spain, no politicians want to alienate whole coastal regions. The recommendations of experts, like those with the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea, are all too often ignored. In the world struggle for resources, fish are usually the losers.

Many German fishermen are now searching for environmentally justifiable methods, to avoid being vilified as "fish murderers" or "environmental pigs" -- the sorts of names they are repeatedly called on coastal esplanades. For more than five years, the German fishing industry and seafood retailers have supported the Marine Stewardship Council's eco-label, which identifies seafood caught legally and in an environmentally responsible way.

There is also a growing trend to provide more exact details about the origin of fish, such as whether halibut was caught off the coast of Iceland or Norway. This can make a big difference, because a fish species can be virtually wiped in one ocean region while flourishing in another.

In addition, organizations like the NEAFC are attempting to establish an international monitoring regime. But the oceans are enormous and there are few inspectors.

Germany has three fisheries protection vessels to monitor its territorial waters in the North Sea and Baltic Sea, as well as to take part in international patrol to places as far away as the Arctic and Canada.

Monitoring on the High Seas

Shortly before midnight, the "Seeadler" slips out of a naval base near Warnemünde on the Baltic Sea. The German authorities have learned that dozens of Polish fishermen, who exceeded their quotas long ago, are on their way to German territorial waters. When the ship reaches the open sea, its main diesel engines roar into action as the massive, 72-meter (236-foot) coastguard ship heads toward the island of Usedom at full speed. But by the next morning there are no Poles in sight. False alarm.

Instead, the "Seeadler" has set its sights on a Danish trawlnet cutter. The inspectors could force the fishermen to haul in their net for inspection immediately, but not without reason. "We don't want to obstruct fishing," says Raik Thomas, the Seeadler's captain. On its tours through the Baltic, each lasting about two weeks, the unarmed "Seeadler" typically completes about 30 inspections.

The Danish ship agrees to bring in its net, voluntarily, and then things move very quickly. Four men put on survival suits and jump into an escort speedboat, which is suspended from a crane above the "Seeadler' deck. Within seconds the inflatable boat is hoisted overboard and dropped the last few meters, hitting the water with a slapping noise. It rushes across the gray waves of the Baltic toward the 15-meter (49-foot) cutter, blue light flashing through the drizzling rain and spray.

The German inspectors have hardly stepped on board before the net emerges from the water. A sack full of plaice and codfish gasping for air hangs above the deck, gills wide open and their mouths pushing through the mesh. The fishermen and inspectors wade, knee-deep at times, through 150 kilos of fish flapping around on the deck. The "Seeadler" team inspects nets and mesh sizes, licenses, fish species and the bycatch. It takes all of 45 minutes for the Germans to give the "Line Charlotte" a seal of approval. "In truth, we rarely run into any problems," says Captain Thomas.

But environmental groups like Greenpeace disagree. They argue the inspections are inadequate. According to Greenpeace officials, too much of what happens on the ocean goes unpunished, and worldwide fishing capacities should be reduced by 50 percent. Greenpeace wants to see conservation zones where fishing is banned altogether established in many ocean regions.

Greenpeace repeatedly tries to deliver at least symbolic messages. This is the case as the "Rainbow Warrior II" sails in the Mediterranean near Naples in the midsummer heat. Its goal is to address one of the most dramatic chapters in the overfishing debate -- the threat of eradication of bluefin tuna. Mediterranean fishermen made a living catching the predatory fish for two millennia, but now it has all but disappeared from the region.

The craving for sushi is the main reason behind this threat to the tuna population. Nowadays some are even willing to pay more than $100,000 (€65,000) for special specimens. The tuna business alone turns over €4 billion ($6.1 billion) in annual revenues.

The combination of high profits and illegal methods has attracted the underworld, too. The Japanese and the Italian mafia are believed to be deeply involved in the tuna business. Horror stories are making the rounds in the fishing community about EU fisheries inspectors who found return air tickets in their hotel rooms upon arriving in Sicily, or the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) activist who found a white lily on her bed -- a mafia death threat.

The tuna farms that have begun to appear off many Mediterranean coasts in recent years also play a growing role in the industry. Young fish caught in the wild are fattened in farms until they're big enough for slaughter. Many of these farms are operated illegally. "It usually isn't clear who exactly is behind these operations. In many cases they are backed by bogus companies," says Alessandro Gianni, a fisheries biologist on board the Rainbow Warrior.

'It looks like "The Swarm" Down Here'

For documentation purposes, Gianni wants to send a diving team into a farm off the Neapolitan coast. But before the Greenpeace boats can reach the underwater cages, they are surrounded by the Italian coast guard. Nevertheless, the Greenpeace team decides to make the dive.

Three men disappear into a cage, where thousands of tuna are crowded together, frantically swimming around in a circle. Even the experienced divers are outraged. "It looks like 'The Swarm' down here," one of them calls out.

Despite such excesses, fish farms could be the salvation of worldwide fish population. Aquaculture, or artificially raising fish and seafood, is one of the world's fastest-growing forms of food production. The industry has grown by an average of 10 percent a year since the early 1990s.

Scientists are already alluding to a "blue revolution" similar to the "green revolution" in agriculture in the 1950s, when new methods quadrupled food production within a short period of time.

A little less than a third of the 1.2 million tons of farmed salmon sold worldwide comes from the farms of the Norwegian company Marine Harvest, the world's largest fish producer, with 7,500 employees in 18 countries. "It won't stay that way," says Leif Frode Onarheim, the company's acting president and CEO. "We have big ambitions."

Marine Harvest's model salmon farm is about an hour by boat from Stavanger, a city on Norway's west coast. A small red, wooden building and 14 cages, each of them 24 meters (79 feet) long, 24 meters wide and 30 meters (98 feet) deep, float in a fjord that is 400 meters (1,312 feet) deep. The cages contain 800,000 salmon, at a market value of about €10 million ($15.3 million).

Salmon are relatively easy to farm. They are well developed by the time they hatch, and they can be fed with industrially produced dry feed, which consists primarily of fish meal. Onarheim is convinced that successes with salmon can be repeated with other species, such as halibut, the South American tilapia and red snapper. The industry is also becoming more adept at dealing with the environmental problems of fish farming.

It takes one year to grow the fish from 100 grams (3.5 oz.) to five kilos (11 lbs.), when they are ready for slaughter. The salmon are pumped out of the cages and into transport ships, which take them to the processing factory at the other end of the fjord. A counter that hangs above the slaughtering machinery provides a running tally of the number of salmon that have been processed on a given day. The red digital numbers change every few seconds: 7,904, 7,905. It is only 11 a.m.

But for Onarheim this is still not fast enough. "We compete with chicken and beef," he says. He wants to see the farms enlarged, producing more and increasingly farther out to sea. Onarheim envisions annual production levels of two or three million fish -- per farm.

This is the reverse of the world of the northern German Pinkis brothers, for whom all of this must be lunacy -- the Pinkis brothers, with their daily catch of 30 or 40 cod, lined up in crates on their garden wall, between rosebushes and a neatly trimmed lawn. A kilo of the Pinkis's codfish sells for €2.50 ($3.83), cheaper than a Big Mac. The Pinkis brothers, who pluck each fish individually from the net and work at temperatures as low as -10 degrees Celsius (14 degrees Fahrenheit), when it's so cold that the codfish are frozen to the net.

No, says Klaus Pinkis, fish will not die out on their account. The brothers have trouble understanding why the people "over in Brussels," the ones who set the quotas, make their lives so difficult. Why can't they just be allowed to fish, without all the rules and regulations? They would know when to stop, would know the right amount of fishing so that both sides, the fisherman and the fish, could survive.

"It's such a wonderful profession, and I don't regret it for a minute," says Pinkis. "But I can't say whether anyone will be doing it after us."

Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan


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Shellfish May Invade North Atlantic As Ice Melts

John Roach, National Geographic News 8 Aug 08;

North Pacific shellfish—including snails and other mollusks—may blaze a path across the Arctic Ocean to the North Atlantic if the sea ice melts in coming decades as predicted, a pair of scientists said today.

Mollusks traveled the northern passage when the Arctic was last ice free, about 3.5 million years ago, during a warm stage of the Pliocene, which spanned 5.3 to 1.8 million years ago, the scientists say.

The Arctic route was cut off when temperatures cooled, starving the ocean of phytoplankton—the floating plants that mollusks need to survive, explained Geerat Vermeij, a geologist at the University of California at Davis.

Current climate models suggest the Arctic will be ice free by 2050. In that scenario, conditions would be similar to those during the mid-Pliocene, and the mollusk migration would resume, the scientists say.

The floating plants make the Arctic like a highway lined with fast-food restaurants, allowing the mollusks to eat their way from the Pacific to the Atlantic, Vermeij said.

"You provide enough nutrition both for the larval stages and, in fact, for fast-growing adults, which [have] a high demand for easily available food," he said.

Vermeij and California Academy of Sciences colleague Peter Roopnarine predict the migration in commentary published in tomorrow's issue of the journal Science.

One Way Trek

According to Vermeij, the invasion will be one-way, with mollusks, as well as algae, fish, barnacles, and other creatures likely to move from the Pacific to the Atlantic.

More water flows northward from the Pacific through the Bering Strait than flows the other way, Vermeij said, explaining why the migration will move in that direction.

The North Pacific, furthermore, teems with marine life that is well adapted to fight for survival in the sparse conditions of the Arctic, he said.

By contrast, North Atlantic marine life is less diverse and less fit.

Still, the invasion is unlikely to cause extinctions in the North Atlantic, he said.

There is no evidence of invasion-spurred extinctions from the migration in the mid-Pliocene, he noted.

And generally, the oceans have plenty of room for native species to hide from the invaders. Even if some are killed, at least a few will survive, the scientists said.

Invasion Consequences

The authors believe the invasion will enrich North Atlantic biodiversity by adding new species and creating new hybrid species as well.

James Carlton, a marine ecologist at Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts, noted that a type of algae called diatom made the trek across the Arctic in 1998.

Now larger species appear poised to make the journey within a few decades, he said. And while the Pacific invaders may not cause extinctions, they could lead to "rather striking changes in the abundance of certain species."

The consequences of the changes, however, are unknown.

"We'll just have to see who shows up on the other side," he said. "That will be absolutely fascinating."


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Vanishing Animal Migrations Need Saving, Experts Say

Ker Than, National Geographic News 8 Aug 08;

Habitat destruction and climate change are making migrations increasingly difficult for many species, but it's not too late to bring these visually spectacular and environmentally critical mass movements back, according to a new study.

Migrations are one of the animal kingdom's most widespread phenomena.

They are seasonal tests of endurance, collective journeys often taken at great costs by birds, whales, land mammals, insects, and other creatures that are wired to roam.

Scientists estimate that one-third to half of all animals—and even some microorganisms—migrate during part of their lives.

"Even slime molds migrate," said study co-author Martin Wikelski, a zoologist at the Max Planck Institute in Germany and a National Geographic Emerging Explorer. Wikelski's study appeared last week in the journal PLoS Biology.

According to scientists, human actions are threatening many migrations. Habitat destruction, the creation of obstacles such as dams and fences, overexploitation of natural resources, and climate change are combining to make migrations increasingly difficult for many species.

Global warming, for example, is changing flowering times and other natural cycles, driving many birds and insects to move their ranges or arrive before or after their food sources have emerged.

Many of the planets great migrations have already vanished. The sight of vast bison herds roaming North America's Great Plains or multitudes of passenger pigeons darkening the skies as they migrated from Canada to the southeastern U.S. are things of the past.

Not Too Late

By increasing public awareness of the plight of migratory animals and committing to the preservation not only of individual species but also their way of life, many migrations can still be saved, write Wikelski and study co-author David Wilcove of Princeton University.

The authors argue that migrations should be saved, if not for the sheer awe that seeing millions of animals moving with one purpose elicits, then for their ecological importance.

Migrating songbirds, for example, snack on plant-eating insects that might otherwise destroy crops or forests during their layovers.

Salmon transport nutrients from oceans to rivers in the form of wastes, eggs, and sperm as they swim upstream to mate.

"What we really want to protect is the natural phenomenon of abundance," Wilcove said. "If we wait until migrating animals are endangered, then we lose both the ecosystem benefits associated with their abundance and also the wonder and majesty of migration."

Unique Challenges

Every migration scientist has his or her own favorite animal migration. Wikelski remembers standing on a New Jersey beach a few years go, transfixed by a moving wall of dragonflies migrating south from Canada and the northern U.S.

"All you see in the view of your binocular is just one dragonfly after another, zooming through your field of vision," he said.

But protecting the migratory routes of dragonflies and other transient creatures is fraught with unique social and political challenges, the authors write.

Their journeys can cross many state and country borders, so their preservation will require international cooperation.

But Wikelski sees hope in joint projects, such as one between Israelis and Palestinians to understand and protect birds migrating between their home states.

"Vultures go between Palestine and Israel, and Syria, and Lebanon. Storks and cranes do the same thing," Wikelski told National Geographic News. "Eventually, people will understand that its just one planet."

Alistair Drake is a migration scientist at the University of New South Wales in Australia who was not involved in the research.

The new paper "implies a need for a more extensive reserve system, and more constraints on blocking developments, than someone focused mainly on resident species and breeding habitats might have envisaged," Drake said.

As the world faces food and fuel shortages, we could face some uncomfortable choices, Drake added. "It's easy to envision a situation where you have a choice between conserving an important stopover habitat or growing food or biofuel on it."

But Wikelski believes humanity is up to the task.

"It's like global warming," he said. "You have to alert people, and after a while, the public knows about it and they do something about it. Thats when the big changes will come about. I think theres absolute hope."


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Conservation warning over 'ragwort hysteria'

Paul Eccleston, The Telegraph 7 Aug 08;

A warning about 'ragwort hysteria' has been issued by conservation agencies after reports of a boom in the potentially fatal weed.

The warm and wet summer has led to more sightings of the yellow-flowered Common Ragwort which can kill horses and other livestock if eaten in large quantities.

But it only poses a threat on pasture or farmland where animals are kept and elsewhere it provides a vital life-support system for insects.

Growing in gardens or on wasteland it is harmless and enormously important to pollinating insects such as bees and wasps.

The distinctive yellow weed Senecio jacobaea grows to waist height and can survive for years as seeds in the ground until conditions are right for it to flower. Recent weeks of warm sunshine interspersed by bouts of heavy rain have been perfect for it to flourish.

Britain's Open Spaces Society chairman Rodney Legg said that in 50 years of walking the countryside he had never seen so much ragwort.

"There are huge swathes of it and it is very toxic and potentially very dangerous," he said.

"It is catered for under the Weeds Act 1959 and landowners have to remove it if it becomes a problem. I always used to pull it up and take it away, but there is so much now it is not really worth it."

Although ragwort can be dangerous and needs to be controlled near livestock, urban myths have grown up about its capacity to kill.

It contains compounds that are poisonous to most vertebrates but these only become active when it has been changed by chemicals after it has been ingested. When it has been eaten in large quantities it can cause cumulative and potentially fatal liver damage.

Ragwort is at its most dangerous when it is already dead or dying and becomes accidentally caught up during mowing and hay-making.

But a horse or cow would have to eat as much as 25 per cent of its own body weight of ragwort to be poisoned.

The charity Buglife says that many insects - bees, wasps, butterflies and moths - and other invertebrates are totally dependent on Ragwort for food.

Director Matt Shardlow said: "Ragwort is a native part of our ecosystems and directly supports more than 40 other species, in addition it is an important nectar source, helping to sustain what is left of our natural pollination services.

"There is a lot of emotive hyperbole about the dangers of ragwort and this should be viewed with a discerning eye. It would be a tragedy if it is pulled out of the ground wherever it is seen."

Matthew Oates, Nature Conservation Adviser at the National Trust, said: "Ragwort, although a threat to livestock, has an important role to play in the biodiversity of our countryside.

"Insects absolutely love it, and it can happily exist in areas set aside for nature conservation as long as these areas are not next door to grazing animals, especially horses.

"It is a hugely difficult species to control and neither the technology nor the resources currently exist to control it effectively."


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Barbadians slam discovery, naming of tiny snake

Danica Coto, Associated Press Yahoo News 8 Aug 08;

A small snake has sparked a big debate in Barbados. Residents of the wealthy Caribbean nation have been heating up blogs and clogging radio airwaves to vent their anger at a U.S. scientist, who earlier this week announced his "discovery" of the world's smallest snake and named it "Leptotyphlops carlae," after his wife Carla.

"If he needs to blow his own trumpet ... well, fine," said 43-year-old Barbadian Charles Atkins. "But my mother, who was a simple housewife, she showed me the snake when I was a child."

One writer to the Barbados Free Press blog took an even tougher tone, questioning how someone could "discover" a snake long known to locals, who called it the thread snake.

"How dare this man come in here and name a snake after his wife?" said the writer who identified themselves as Margaret Knight.

The man she refers to is Penn State University evolutionary biologist S. Blair Hedges, whose research teams also have discovered the world's tiniest lizard in the Dominican Republic and the smallest frog in Cuba.

Hedges recently became the first to describe the snake — which is so small it can curl up on a U.S. quarter — when he published his observations and genetic test results in the journal "Zootaxa." Full-grown adults typically are less than 4 inches long.

Hedges told The Associated Press on Friday that he understands Barbadians' angry reactions, but under established scientific practice, the first person to do a full description of a species is said to have discovered it and gives it a scientific name.

He said most newly "discovered" species are already well known to locals, and the term refers to the work done in a laboratory to establish a genetic profile. In the study, he reported that two specimens he analyzed were found in 1889 and 1963.

"There are no false claims here, believe me," Hedges said.

Damon Corrie, president of the Caribbean Herpetological Society, acknowledged that Hedges is the first to scientifically examine and describe the snake, but the so-called discovery makes locals seem ignorant.

"It gives the impression that people here ... depend on people from abroad to come and show us things in our own backyard," Corrie said.

Karl Watson, a historian and ornithologist at the University of the West Indies in Barbados, said it's common for people to get excited over very tiny or very large animals.

"Probably people have overreacted. ... It's nationalism going a bit awry," Watson said.

Hedges agreed: "I think they're carrying it a bit too far."

"Snakes are really apolitical," he said.


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Amazonian Chernobyl - Ecuador's oil environment disaster

Clare Kendall, The Telegraph 8 Aug 08;

Once it was pristine rainforest. Now it has been described as an Amazonian Chernobyl.

Millions of gallons of crude oil and toxic waste - the legacy of an oil extraction programme - has blighted 1,700 hectares of land and poisoned the rivers and streams in Sucumbios in the north-east corner of Ecuador.

The region is home to five different indigenous tribes and its rich biodiversity includes many thousands of plant and animal species.

Oil has been one of the South American country's most profitable exports since the 1960s but it has come at a terrible environmental price.

Amazon Watch, the Environmental action group, claim that in excess of 17m tonnes of oil waste has been dumped in open and unlined pits which has poisoned the land and the water course.

Locals claim that many oil pits in the 1990s were simply covered in plastic, rubble and soil and are still leaking toxic chemicals into local water supplies.

Indigenous Indian people blame the pollution on the US oil giant Chevron - formerly Texaco - and say it has caused a catalogue of health problems including severe birth defects, spontaneous miscarriages and cancers.

Their plight has attracted a galaxy of environmentalists and campaigners including film star Daryl Hannah, Sting and Trudie Styler and British 'Eco-aristocrat' Zoe Tryon, daughter of the Prince of Wales' late friend, Lady Tryon.

For more than a decade the ruined landscape has been the subject of a bitter lawsuit brought by 30,000 Ecuadorians against Chevron who operated an oil concession between 1972-1992.

It is a David and Goliath battle with the Ecuadorians being represented by local hero and environmentalist Pablo Fajardo, who started life as a labourer on plantations, supporting his poor family, while at the same time putting himself through law school.

His courage in taking on such a powerful opponent has won him a Goldman Prize - the environmental equivalent of an Oscar.

Chevron, who operated as a minority partner with Ecuador's own state-owned extraction company, Petroecuador, claims its responsibilities ended in 1992 when it handed over its operations in Sucumbios to the state and implemented a $40 million remediation programme. The responsibility, they claim, now lies with Petroecuador.

In April, a court appointed expert handed in a long awaited report following detailed inspections of the affected areas and recommended that, should Chevron lose the case, it should pay up to $16bn in damages. The figure would be a world record and set a global precedent.

The ruling was hailed by local campaigners as a milestone and by Chevron as a charade. They claim court procedures weren't followed and that the Ecuadorian geologist who compiled the report, Richard Cabrera, had been aided by parties connected to the local people.

But the ruling acted as a wake-up call for Chevron. According to a recent report in Newsweek it forced the California-based oil company to disclose the issue to its shareholders.

And it has prompted, according to the magazine, a high-powered battle in Washington between an army of Chevron lobbyists and the lawyers working on behalf of the Ecuadorians.

Chevron is urging the Bush administration to take trade sanctions against Ecuador unless the legal action is dropped.

The company claims it has been victimised by a "corrupt" Ecuadoran court system while its opponents received support from Ecuador's leftist president, Rafael Correa - an ally of Venezuela's Hugo Chávez. Chevron says a loss could set a dangerous precedent for other US multinationals.

But the dispute has taken a new twist. Steve Donziger, a US trial lawyer working on behalf of the Ecuadorians, has recruited an old basketball friend from Harvard, Barack Obama, who at the time hadn't even announced his presidential intentions.

Obama was apparently so impressed by photographic evidence of the oil pits he wrote to the US trade representative, Rob Portman, urging him to let the case rest in the hands of the Ecuadorian judge.

He stands by his position which could be an important factor should he become President in November.


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Ivory Coast toxic sites still a threat: U.N. expert

Laura MacInnis, Reuters 8 Aug 08;

GENEVA (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of people in Ivory Coast are still suffering serious health problems two years after toxic waste was dumped there, a United Nations human rights expert said on Friday.

Okechukwu Ibeanu, an independent U.N. investigator, said in a statement the seven sites around the commercial capital Abidjan had still not been decontaminated, with dire consequences for those living around them.

"Victims whom I have met with continue to complain of headaches, skin lesions, nose, throat and lung problems as well as digestive problems," he said at the conclusion of a six-day trip to Ivory Coast.

"I am very concerned about the situation especially for women, who have complained of an increase in premature births, early menopause and miscarriages since the dumping occurred."

The Nigerian political science professor said many people were forced to abandon their homes and businesses after the August 2006 dumping, in which chemical slop was offloaded from a ship in open-air sites around Abidjan.

At least 16 people died and thousands were poisoned.

Some have since returned to live and work near the sites because they lack the means to relocate elsewhere, Ibeanu said, calling on the government to act quickly to compensate victims and monitor the dump sites for lingering risks.

People living in affected areas should also be checked and treated for health problems related to the toxins, he said, noting that many victims are unable to afford medical care.

"The people of Abidjan need urgent assistance. After two years, they continue to live in precarious conditions and their right to a healthy and safe environment continues to be violated," he said.

"Some of the victims I met are the most vulnerable, without enough money to eat, let alone pay for expensive medical bills."

Ibeanu will travel later this year to the Netherlands, where the Probo Koala ship began its journey from Amsterdam, to speak with various stakeholders including executives from the oil trading firm Trafigura which chartered the vessel.

"I hope to be able to get a more comprehensive view of what happened and ascertain responsibility," he said.

Trafigura has agreed to pay a $198 million settlement to the Ivory Coast government but denies responsibility for the dumping or any wrongdoing. Dutch prosecutors said in February they would file criminal charges against the company, and an Ivorian court threw out a case against Trafigura in March.

Ibeanu said the Ivorian government should intensify its pursuit of pending criminal proceedings against people and companies implicated in the disaster.

"This is to send a signal to other transnational corporations and individuals that such crimes will not go unpunished and that Africa is not a cheap dumping ground."

(Editing by Stephanie Nebehay and Mary Gabriel)


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Global warming threatens indigenous peoples: FAO

Yahoo News 8 Aug 08;

Global warming and limited access to land and other resources threaten many indigenous peoples, the UN food agency warned Friday.

"Indigenous peoples are among the first to suffer from increasingly harsh and erratic weather conditions, and a generalised lack of empowerment to claim goods and services," said indigenous peoples expert Regina Laub of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

Many indigenous groups live in vulnerable environments such as mountainous areas, the Arctic, jungles or dry lands, added the FAO statement released on the eve of the International Day for the World's Indigenous Peoples.

The FAO noted that native populations also played a critical role in adapting to climate change.

Indigenous communities are often the custodians of unique knowledge and skills, the Rome-based agency noted, adding that some 80 percent of the world's remaining biodiversity "that may be vital in adapting to climate change" is found within their territories.

The world's indigenous peoples population is estimated at 370 million, representing at least 5,000 different groups in more than 70 countries.

"Defending the recovery of ancestral lands, the self-determination of indigenous peoples and their human rights is at the core of their claims," the statement added.


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