|
Little more than 40 years ago, the lagoon
fishers still observed the simple rules for
conservation of environment and fisheries resources
that their ancestors had established some three
centuries earlier. Based on taboos, these customary
rules forbade all capture of fingerlings or
juveniles. They also designated rest days when no
one was allowed to fish for fear of incurring the
wrath of the gods. There is still in fact a section
of the Ouidah coastal lagoon, between Hio and
Avlékété, called vodounto (a
sacred lagoon traditionally inhabited by the
deities that is also a refuge for fish). Fishing in
this area is strictly forbidden so that stocks can
recover. The area is guarded by dagbo hounon, the
chief fetisheer of the region, who inflicts heavy
fines on offenders.
However, the advent of outside religions eroded
the authority of the traditional chiefs and upset
the balance between the increased number of fishers
and available fish resources: children follow their
parents as fishers in the lake and lagoon areas.
The ecological equilibrium has therefore been
disrupted, and the rapid increase in fishing gear
and the employment of illegal practices have
resulted in:
- a smaller size at recruitment for the main
target species;
- the destruction of natural spawning
grounds;
- a lower catch per unit effort;
- more disputes between fisher groups.
In 1992, recognizing that the legislative
framework had not enabled the fisheries board to
bring about rational fisheries management, and
acting on the instigation of the local authorities,
the government set up some 20 Fishing Committees on
an experimental basis in villages or groups of
villages bordering the lagoon of Porto-Novo. Each
committee is made up of fishers' representatives
who are democratically elected for a three-year
term, which can be renewed in the General Assembly.
Each committee has nine to 15 members, including an
executive of five elected members who are briefed
on fisheries legislation by the administration and
are expected to pass on the information to the
other fishers.
Committee members must be full-time fishers of
sound character and good social standing. They
receive no payment. Each fisher in the village has
to pay a minimum monthly contribution of 150 CFA
francs (about US$0.3) towards the committee's
operating costs. The basic function of the
committee is to see that the lagoon is used
rationally for the conservation of its resources
and ecosystem. More specifically, the Fishing
Committee is expected to:
- raise awareness of fisheries rules and
regulations;
- ensure compliance with traditional practices
that are aimed at protecting resources and the
aquatic environment;
- in conjunction with the Fisheries
Administration, ensure that the regulations and
the decisions reached in the fisher's general
assembly are applied;
- serve as a forum of discussion, analysis and
conciliation for the settlement of
disputes;
- support any lagoon management and use
programmes considered necessary by the
administration.
The Fisheries Administration gives its support
to all the committees' activities so long as these
comply with regulatory provisions. The committees
cannot apply sanctions; their role is more to alert
their respective communities to the possible
dangers of failing to observe fisheries
regulations.
In August 1996, in an effort to ensure
sustainable fishing on Benin's inland waters, the
Fisheries Administration adopted a plan of
management with the following strategic
thrusts:
- the implementation of institutional
mechanisms for participatory management;
- the management of fisheries resources within
an appropriate legal framework;
- the identification and promotion of
activities to develop alternative sources of
income.
In 1997, the government issued Interministerial
Decree No. 312 on the institution, organization,
functions and operation of the Fishing Committees
in the Republic of Benin in order to give them
juridical status. There are now 90 Fishing
Committees involved in co-managing the principal
water bodies of three southern departments of
Benin.
|