Tag: Fishermen

  • Fishermen list pollution, trawlers’ incursion, others as obstacles to vocation

    Fishermen list pollution, trawlers’ incursion, others as obstacles to vocation

    Traditional fishermen operating in the creeks, rivers and Atlantic coastlines of Bayelsa State have listed oil pollution, incursion by industrial fishing trawlers and unnatural fishing methods as obstacles to their vocation.

    They identified the challenges yesterday at a capacity building workshop organised by Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF) in Yenagoa.

    The fishermen identified the obstacles at a brainstorming session facilitated by the Research and Publications Lead at HOMEF, Dr. Ogechi Cookey, saying they were responsible for dwindling catch by fishermen across the Niger Delta.

    According to them, industrial fishing trawlers restricted by law from operating near the coastline often encroach to ‘sweep’ the waterways by overfishing and catching fingerlings that ought to grow to replenish the fish stock.

    They also lamented that some fishermen use some local leaves and mix them with chemicals to boost catch to the detriment of the food chain.

    A community leader in Ikarama, Yenagoa Local Government, Chief Washington Odoyibo, noted that oil exploration and associated spills had wiped out fish species and made the waters toxic to support fishing.

    He said during oil spill incidents, the booms used to trap crude from spreading obstruct navigation by fishing boats and regretted that oil firms often abandon the booms even after clean up.

    Also, a community leader in Ikarama, Chief Mrs Ayibakuro Warder, noted that prolonged exposure to crude and inhaling the toxic fumes had increased the prevalence of asthma and other respiratory ailments.

    Warder said: “The frequent spills in Ikarama has led to diagnosis of many new strange ailments previously not common, and women are worst hit because they stay longer on the farms and get exposed to crude.

    “The report by Bayelsa Oil and Environmental Commission found higher than normal levels of heavy metals in breast milk of breastfeeding mothers.

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    “High rate of miscarriages among women of reproductive ages in oil communities was also reported by the study.” 

    A renowned environmentalist, Chief Alagoa Morris, praised HOMEF for building the capacity of fishermen to defend their environmental and human rights.

    Morris, who is also technical adviser on Environment to Bayelsa Governor, urged the fishermen to make contributions that would help policy makers to formulate policies to improve fisheries.

    Senior Special Assistant on Tourism to Bayelsa State Governor, Dr Piriye Kiyaromo, in his goodwill message, noted that there was a link between fishing and tourism.

    He said tourists often accompany fishermen on fishing expeditions even as they also add to the culinary experience of tourists who crave local dishes.

    Kiyaramo noted that the proposed State Ministry of Blue Economy in Bayelsa would take care of the concerns and challenges faced by fishermen, who form a significant segment of the blue economy.

  • Nigerians praise fishermen for refusing to give turtle up

    Stories of denigration abound on the social media about corruption and lack of patriotism by Nigerians usually attributed to poverty in the land. But Twitter user, @Joeyakan shared how local fishermen and policemen in Oniru, Lagos refused to allow some foreigners go away with an endangered sea turtle and warmed the hearts of many.

    @JoeyAkan shared on his Twitter handle Monday:

    “Behind my office at Landmark Towers, there’s a body of water that links to the seas. White fishermen show up a lot and cast their nets to catch some fish.

    They are welcome, treated with respect and assisted by the locals. The men in turn behave.

    “But today, something happened. When the white fishermen cast their nets, they caught a lot of fish. But they also caught something strange, a large water turtle. Catching a water turtle was a shock, but it also came with toll – the shell of the turtle tore the net. Damaged it.

    “And then the best thing happened. The locals rally and stopped the men from taking the turtle away. ‘Na only fish you get permission to catch,’ one said. ‘This one no be fish. Drop am.’ The men refused, and an argument came on. They called more locals for support.

    “The men called the police attached to Landmark for help. The police supported the locals. Turns out water turtles are almost extinct because of poaching and the work on Eko Atlantic affecting their habitat. So these locals came together to make a law protecting them. It worked.

    “The numbers are decent now. Turtles are back, and they need protection. The whites, seeing that they were not going to get any support, asked them to pay for the cost of the damage to their nets. They negotiated for long, before they agreed and money was exchanged.

    “The turtle was returned, and it was carried to the sea in a little ceremony. People marched as it was hoisted in the air. When it touched the water, everyone clapped. The turtle went back in, saved by humans. The whites left. Case closed.”

    Akan said the episode renewed his hope in the country’s redemption.

    “So, while Nigeria brings all of its negativity to shred your spirit, there still exists some good in small pockets of light. People who have chosen to take charge of their corner and make it better. I just saw one of such pockets in action. And I am so happy,” he said.
    Akan’s thread had generated 1,475 retweets and 1,275 likes by early Tuesday.

    Many who commented also shared Akan’s sentiments about Nigeria overcoming corruption, while expressing shock that foreigners who they expected to do the right thing acres otherwise.

    @eniolaaa said: “Before I read the thread completely, I concluded that the white men were going to return the turtle without anyone telling them but alas!”

    Oluwaseun Banwo replied, saying: “We often believe these whites are well behaved by default, NO. They are well behaved in their societies cos they don’t condone anyhowness. They jump queues here arrange with police to ‘ride’ locals because they can get away with it.”

    Sabina Anyaebizi (@bellabeenah) praised the local fishermen, saying: “Oh Wow. All hope is not lost afterall. We can still redeem Nigeria if we try! Kudos to those great Nigerians. And these ‘whites’ who are supposedly the “self acclaimed” protectors of the environment had to be schooled by the locals on the right thing to do. I’m so proud of them.”

    Baamofin Lu’Jesha wondered why the locals had to pay for the foreigners’ damaged net

    “My own issue is why they had to pay the fishermen for the nets. They’d been fishing there for free all this while. The locals had no moral obligation to pay for their nets,” he tweeted, while @Tobiloba_o replied: “The turtle broke their nets and for peace to reign they decided to.

    Be sure that next time they come they would be more cautious because then they would not get anyone to pay for their net if it cuts.”
    However, @chiddysville2 wrote that they should be barred from fishing at the place.

    “They shouldn’t be allowed to fish there anymore,” he wrote and got support from Twitter user, @ayomachine, who wrote, “cos they lack manners and culture.”

    Another Twitter user, @odii_kelechi, said it was ilegal to catch turtles with nets.

    “I studied nautical science and fishery is part of my major in nautical college and I work closely too with organisation that enforce the law here in our coastal waters. Nobody is permitted to catch turtles with net here in Nigeria,” he wrote.

  • Makoko fishermen: dredging, oil spill threaten our livelihood

    Makoko fishermen: dredging, oil spill threaten our livelihood

    The fishermen of Makoko riverine settlement in Lagos have converged on the community’s Zontal Club Centre for a Community Dialogue, with the theme: Fish-Not-Oil, where they discussed what they believed to be major threats to their environment, personal wellbeing and means of livelihoods. WALE AJETUNMOBI reports.

    The information about the meeting was disseminated late, but a considerable number of fishermen trooped to the venue to attend it. This obviously showed the pertinence of the event to their well being and livelihoods.

    The Zontal Club Centre where the Community Dialogue was held became a beehive. Fishermen of Makoko, a riverine settlement on the fringe of Ebute Metta in Lagos, deemed it appropriate to cancel daily routines and join in the conversation about the misfortune that has struck their exclusive occupation – fishing – in recent times.

    The fishermen’s countenances were expressive, evidently showing their fury and feeling of deprivation. The vigour of their agitations apparently underscored one thing: what used to be their lucrative trade is now endangered.

    At the Community Dialogue, the fishermen bore their minds on the challenges facing them and how the megacity project of the Lagos State government is affecting their trade. The interactive event, tagged Fish-Not-Oil, was organised by Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF), an environment right group.

    During the conversation moderated by a number of environmental rights activists, the fishermen said constant oil spill and the ongoing dredging around the coastline are depriving them of their rights to livelihood and spreading poverty in the community. They expressed fear that their means of livelihood could be destroyed completely if the government does not halt the ongoing construction projects around the Makoko coastline.

    Makoko is a riverine slum at the edge of the Lagos lagoon and across the Third Mainland Bridge. It is a home to a significant number of Nigeria’s estimated 6.5 million fishermen occupying the nation’s 850 kilometre coastline.

     

    Depleting fishing harvest in Makoko lagoon

    For many years, the fishermen of Makoko, who live mainly on subsistence fishing, enjoyed their trade without impediment. According to the fishermen, they used to go for multiple catches in a day, with variety of fishes to sell in the market.

    The story, however, changed after they started experiencing constant hydrocarbon pollution, resulting from the oil spill around the coastline. This, they said, kills aquatic species that could be fetched onshore close the coastline.

    Fishes and variety of aquatic species, which the fishermen easily found in the lagoon, are not readily available as a result of the pollution, making it difficult for them to get abundant harvest.

    “We are no longer enjoying fishing around our shoreline,” Chief J.P. Akere, the Vice President of Makoko Fishermen Association, summed up his colleagues’ dilemma in his opening remarks.

    He said: “Each fisherman used to go for three catches in a day. That was the period when we could get all varieties of fishes around the lagoon. Today, we hardly get good catches, because of the oil spill coming from Niger Delta area. This is affecting us in unimaginable way.

    “Before we can get good harvest, we need to sail deep into the midstream. But, this is a dangerous voyage for many of us, because we usually used canoes for fishing. We don’t have motorboats that can withstand the water current midstream. Our means of livelihood is daily threatened, because we are no longer making money from fishing. Our cast nets have been destroyed by the harmful chemicals that come with oil spill on our water.”

     

    ’Dredging endangers our lives’

    The fishermen’s woes in catching fishes within shallow perimeters of the lagoon shore have been compounded by the ongoing dredging and land recovery projects around the Makoko coastline. The fishermen said the deeper the base of the ocean, the more it is difficult for them to catch fishes in the lagoon.

    More so, the fixed-net structures they constructed within the lagoon to trap fishes are being destroyed by the excavators used for the dredging. The fishermen complained the vibration from the excavators also weakens the bases of their wooden shelters built in the lagoon, thereby endangering their lives and destroying their means of livelihood.

    Akere said: “The ongoing dredging has made the fish to go down the base of the water where our cast nets cannot reach. The fixed-net traps, which we built at the base of the shallow zone of the lagoon, are being cleared by the excavators used for the dredging. It costs us about N300,000 to construct a fixed-net trap.

    “The vibration from the machines they are using to dredge also puts our lives in danger. The foundations of the shelters we built in the lagoon have been weakened as result of the vibration from the machines.”

     

    Activists rise in support of fishermen

    At the end of their discussion, the fishermen concluded that oil spill and dredging activity around the coastline need to stop. They urged the federal and state governments to stop activities putting their lives at risk and threatening their rights to livelihood. Their conclusion was supported by the rights activists in attendance.

    Convener of the Rural and Urban Development Initiative, Comrade Ishola Agbodemu, described the plight of the fishermen as “life-threatening”, saying the government must address the situation urgently.

    The environmental activist, who works with vulnerable people, said it was insensitive for the government not to be conscious of the impact of its megacity project on the vulnerable people. He said: “It is insensitive for the government not to take into consideration the effect of the ongoing dredging and the oil spill on the fishing community. It is sad that we have a government which is only concerned about megacity, but not the wellbeing of the vulnerable people in the society. They are embarking on dredging, with the aim to evacuate people living in the slum.

    “We are not against development drive of the government. They have to put people’s means of livelihood into consideration. This is why this dialogue is very important, because it will create the awareness to the general world about government’s intention and plan. People should not suffer because government wants a megacity.”

    Mohammed Zanna, representative of the Justice and Empowerment Initiative, said there was need for the fishermen to adopt new methods in fishing against the backdrop of the difficulties in getting good harvest. This, he said, would be in line with the demands of a megacity project of the government.

    He said: “It is a surprise that many fishermen still use the old methods used by our fore fathers to fish. This is why the government is not taking the plight of fishermen seriously. This old method needs to change and give way to the modern practice of fishing. There is nothing stopping a fisherman to have a good motorboat to fish in the midstream.”

    The Baale (Head) of Makoko, Chief Ayinde Jeje, said the ongoing dredging is affecting the residents. He noted poverty could increase in the riverine community if activities destroying the inhabitants’ means of livelihood are not stopped.

    Chief Jeje also appealed to the government to build a general hospital in Makoko-Iwaya area, noting that many residents had died because of the lack of health centre in the area.

     

    NGO: ‘Fishing not a threat to megacity project’

    HOMEF’s Director, Mr Nnimmo Bassey, who facilitated the Community Dialogue, said fishing is a “timeless occupation”, with an estimate of 6.5 million people depending on it. He wondered why artisan fishermen living in coastline usually became victims of what he called government’s “insensitive development plan”, pointing out that government was out to impoverish the fishermen with the ban on fishing around oil platforms in the water.

    He said: “The combination of security cordon in the lagoon and oil spills places the fishermen at a disadvantaged position. The only option for many fishermen is to go into the high seas before they can have good harvest. As it is, the fishermen cannot afford to standard boats and modern equipment needed to go on fishing in high seas. Security forces have been placed on high seas to stop fishermen from getting close to oil platforms.”

    Bassey said fishing was not a threat to the realisation of megacity project of the government, pointing out that pollution through oil spill and dredging is the major threat to the environment.

    He said: “Not many people bother to answer a salient question as to what we would do if the water well runs dry. Probably, the answer would be to dig another well. If that one dries up too, you simply keep digging new ones. The question changes when we ask, what would happen if the ground water over an entire territory is polluted and we set about digging wells there? The answer is that, no matter how many wells we dig, we would end up with polluted water.

    “Most of these fisher folks live on riverine communities without public utilities, no schools, no health centres. That situation is not different here in Makoko. Today we are examining the pollution in this environment. We are looking back at what living and fishing in this community was, some decades ago and the situation today. Changes have taken place. The essence of this Community Dialogue is to identify those factors that brought about the changes. Then, we will prepare an action plan by which we hope to recover the community’s ecological heritage and preserve same for future generations.”

  • Fishermen’s lament

    SIR: Fishermen are now facing another form of disaster which is waste materials (grass or seaweed) that is floating in Atlantic Ocean and rivers.  They are known to sink after a while.

    As at the time of writing, unimaginable magnitude of these waste materials have been dumped on the coastline and still remain in the ocean.

    The catastrophe has impoverished fishermen by condemning their fishing nets when it enters their nets which are very costly nowadays, and during this period it would be very rare to make a good catch which makes life unbearable.

    This phenomenon started in 2011, and from 2011 to 2016 it usually occurred between March and May before disappearing into the ocean but this year, it started in July.

    Fishermen are lamenting, contemplating where this grass, seaweed waste came from because it has not been happening.

    Let the authorities help us.

     

    • Adolphus Francis Unenene,

    Eastern Obolo, Akwa Ibom State.

  • Police, fishermen trade words over Lekki mayhem

    The police and some fishermen yesterday traded words over the deaths and burning of houses in Otodogbame in Ikate, Lekki, during an ethnic clash on Wednesday.

    The fishermen accused the police of setting their homes ablaze, but the police denied the allegation, asking the people for proof

    An expectant mother, Bose Alade, her three-year-old son John, Tunde, 18, Tega, 21, Thoto Avonba, Sesinu Ahiaboji, Mawuyon Oviawe, Hosu Whejede, Misimawu Sogotho, Athanji Sosu Abosede, Babajide Tosihun and Mifinrinfo Esinfo, died in the clash.

    Alade with her baby strapped to her back was reportedly fleeing from teargas canisters and gunshots; the children among the casualties drowned in the lagoon on their way from school. Alade’s and John’s bodies have been recovered and buried.

    Insisting that his men had no hand in the incident, Lagos State Police Commissioner said: “Precious, you have a choice. Choose what you want to use. The police relayed what happened on Wednesday and we stand by it.”

    As at 6pm yesterday, the children’s bodies are yet to be recovered. But the injured were being taken out for treatment.

    The fight between the fishermen and youths was said to have continued yesterday as more houses were burnt by those allegedly sent by a traditional ruler.

    The fishermen claimed that policemen from Area J and Jakande Division looted their properties.

    According to Segun Akinkpo, his friends Tunde and Tega were among those that drowned.

    Akinkpo told The Nation in tears that the police set their homes ablaze and shot teargas canisters at people to scare them.

    He said: “It was the policemen deployed here that committed more atrocities. They claimed they were sent by Governor Akinwunmi Ambode to destroy all shanties in Lagos but they never showed us any directive to that effect. They usually attacked between 12am and 1pm. Even today (yesterday) they burnt our houses and looted our properties.

    “They blocked all the entrance and exit routes into the community. They were shooting teargas and releasing bullets in the air to scare people. The people are devastated. So many people including me sustained injuries. There’s no hospital in this community to take them to because they burnt down both our health centre and private hospital. Our churches were also razed.

    “Most of us are still in the water. They have killed my paddies – Tunde and Tega. The two of them are still inside the water as I talk to you. The policemen even stole our properties. There is one of them whose name is Mohammed, he usually visited this place before now.

    “I watched him steal Plasma television and he was shooting in the air so that no one could come near him. They burnt down everything. I could only escape with the clothe I was wearing. I am a graphic artist but I lost all my books, documents, art works, my certificates, including my birth certificate.

    “It is very unfair. We do not believe the government would send them to come and kill us or destroy our properties. What kind of government would send people to destroy the properties of its citizens without even allowing them pick their valuables?

    “Everything in my mother’s shop was destroyed. Her fridge and all the things she used for her business are gone. The ones they couldn’t steal, they burnt. As I talk to you, my mother, Mrs Josephine Akinkpo, is still crying. She hasn’t stopped crying since Wednesday. Where do we start from?

    Another resident who simply identified himself as Solomon said they were devastated, adding that they incurred heavy losses.

    Narrating how the kids drowned, he said: “It was horrible. The children were in school and didn’t know what was happening. It was around 11am. And so, some parents contacted the school so that their kids can be released before the school would be burnt.

    “As they were returning home people were running into the water from the teargas. That was how the children fell into the river. Till now, we have not seen their bodies. We got their names from their parents.

    “I was also told that at least five adults are unaccounted for. What they did in our community is unbearable. It was wicked, to say the least. We do not have anywhere to go at the moment. People are still hanging around because there is no place to go to.”

  • Fishermen, farmers decry environmental degradation

    Fishermen and farmers in coastal areas of Akwa Ibom State have lamented the havoc they go through because of oil and gas exploration.

    They said their means of livelihood were being threatened.

    The people spoke yesterday when a delegation of Fishing and Farming Multipurpose Cooperative Societies (MPCS) from coastal communities visited the Akwa Ibom Oil Producing Community Development Network (AKIPCON) secretariat in Uyo.

    The visit was to identify with the philosophy of AKIPCON, especially as it related to the struggle for compensation from oil and gas companies to indigenes.

    The leaders of fish and crop farmers, Mr. Christopher Akpan and Nkereuwem Akpe, lamented the losses members have incurred.

    They listed them: Loss of fishing equipment, outboard motor engines, lack of potable water, pollution of water bodies and contamination of sea foods, low crop yield, oily soil due to oil spills on farmlands, lack of compensation, non-award of scholarships to their children and wards, among others.

    They urged AKIPCON to fight for their rights, pledging their support.

    AKIPCON President Dr. Ufot Phenson thanked the group for the visit.

    He promised to protect the environment and rights of the people.

    According to him, “we will ensure that compensations of decades of environmental degradation and exploitation, occasioned by oil and gas companies’ operations, as championed by AKIPCON, are paid.”

    Phenson said the suffering and negative impact of over 50 years of oil and gas exploration and production by multinational companies had caused the people their occupation, namely fishing and farming.

    He regretted that families of those engaged in fishing and farming, despite the frustration, could not enrol their children in schools, afford three square meals or meet daily needs, as profits from their occupations were hampered, following the negative impact of oil and gas activities on the soil, water and air.

    Phenson said the lives of Niger Deltans were shortened because of poisoned air emanating from flare gas and poisoned sea foods.

    He hoped that with the measures taken by AKIPCON, the masses would be relieved.

  • 26 fishermen held since 2012 freed by Somali pirates

    The crew of a fishing vessel hijacked by Somali pirates four and a half years ago is finally free after payment of a ransom, officials said.

    There were 29 members on the Taiwan-owned Naham 3 fishing vessel when pirates occupied it in March 2012 and took them to the north-central Mudug region.

    Three of them reportedly died of illness and mistreatment in the intervening time.

    The remaining 26 members are now free, who  include natives of Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, India and other Asian nations.

    The ship was flagged in Oman.

    The pirates reportedly demanded a ransom of three million dollars, but the source said less than that had been paid.

    The money was believed to have come from the Asian countries’ governments and the hostages’ families.

    The hostages were due to be flown to Kenya to prepare them for repatriation. (dpa/NAN)

  • Sea pirates kidnap 8 fishermen in A/Ibom, says council boss

    Sea pirates kidnap 8 fishermen in A/Ibom, says council boss

    • Police: We are not aware of incident

    Eight fishermen have been kidnapped by sea pirates in Ibeno, Akwa Ibom, the transitional chairman of Ibeno local government area, Chief Williams Mkpah, said yesterday.

    Six of them were abducted on Thursday and two on Friday morning in the Ibeno creeks, Mkpah told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)

    “As I am speaking sea pirates is intensifying in the Ibeno community and they want to ensure that that they stop fishermen from going to sea for fishing,” he said.

    Mkpah said that the sea pirates were demanding millions of naira as ransom from the fishermen before releasing them.

    He explained that the fishermen were made to pay levies by the sea pirates before they go for fishing in the area.

    He alleged that “they have informants in our communities, who will inform them of the take off of a particular fisherman and possible routes where they are going for fishing.

    “One of them was caught in Eket in the process of coming to collect ransom for somebody. One of the Ibeno boys made us to track him.

    “And he has made useful statement to the police but as I speak now I don’t know what the Police Command in Uyo is doing about it.

    “Since the suspect was caught, the issue of sea pirates increased seriously and they are now demanding for their man.

    “Since we don’t want to release their man, they have now resorted to kidnapping of every fisherman,’’ Mkpah said.

    Mkpah asked security operatives to be more proactive in combating sea piracy in the state.

    “In a very short while we will declare hunger strike in this community because when we can no longer go to sea, we will all be starving.

    “If the security in this state cannot rise to the challenge of the people of Ibeno and salvage us from this menace, Ibeno people will die of hunger,’’ he said.

    He said that he has officially written to security operatives in the state but got no response.

    However, the Public Relations Officer of the Police Command in Akwa Ibom, ASP Cordelia Nwawe, said the command was unaware of the kidnap of the eight fishermen in Ibeno.

    “They should make an official reports to the Akwa Ibom Command for proper investigations.

    “They should officially tell the police. So, I don’t have the reports and I can’t comment on it,’’ Nwawe said.

     

  • Fishermen lament hoodlums’ attacks in Rivers

    Fishermen lament hoodlums’ attacks in Rivers

    Fishermen yesterda, raised the alarm over incessant attacks on their fishing settlements on the Bonny waterways in Rivers State.

     The fishing camps comprise mainly Ilaje and Ijaw settlers who hail from various parts of the Niger Delta.

     The camps are Forupaka (Ago-Eri), Mumakiri (Ajegunle/Bayelsa) and Iwokiri fishing communities.

     One of the fishermen from Bayelsa State, who spoke in confidence, said attacks on the camps had become a daily occurrence, adding that their lives were in danger.

     He said their attackers are involved in sea piracy and armed robbery and are camped close to Oyorokoto.

    He said: “They are a gang of gun-wielding criminals involved in sea piracy, armed robbery and killings camped near Oyorokoto from where they terrorise the communities in Bonny territories.

     “About a month ago they killed a young Ilaje fisherman in cold blood, without provocation. It has become their daily routine to extort money from the mainly Ilaje and Ijaw settlers

    “Twice in less than two months they have sacked these communities forcing the people to flee to other fishing settlements in Akwa Ibom and Bayelsa states.”

     The gang is led by a man simply identified as Felix, who, he said, personally stormed the camps on June 8, ransacking the settlements and injuring fishermen.

     “When they came on June 8, they chased people up and down. Many people abandoned their camps and ran into the forest. They almost killed one of the youths.

     “The government should quickly deploy security to arrest this mad gang before they waste more lives,” he said.

  • Fishermen lament hoodlums’ attacks in Rivers 

    Fishermen, Wednesday, raised the alarm over incessant raids, robberies and attacks on their fishing settlements located along the Bonny waterways, Bonny, Rivers State.

    It was gathered that the fishing camps comprise mainly Ilaje and Ijaw settlers who hail from different states in the Niger Delta region.

    The camps are identified by their names as Forupaka (Ago-Eri), Mumakiri (Ajegunle/Bayelsa) and Iwokiri fishing communities.

    One of the fishermen from Bayelsa a state who spoke in confidence said attacks on people living in the camps had become a daily occurrence adding that their lives were in danger.

    He further identified the hoodlums as a gang of criminals involved in sea piracy and armed robbery camped close to Oyorokoto.

    He said: “They are a gang of gun-wielding criminals involved in sea piracy, armed robbery and killings camped near Oyorokoto from where they terrorize the communities in Bonny territories.

    “About a month ago they killed a young Ilaje fisherman in cold blood without provocation. It has become their daily routine to extort money from the mainly Ilaje and Ijaw settlers

    “Twice in less than two months they have sacked these communities forcing the people to flee to other fishing settlements in Akwa Ibom and Bayelsa states”.

    He said the gang was being led by one Felix, who said personally stormed the camps on June 8, ransacking the settlements and injuring fishermen.

    “When they came on June 8, they chased people upon down and many people abandoned their camps and ran into the forest. They almost killed one of the youths.

    “The government should quickly deploy the security to arrest this mad gang before they waste more lives,” he said.