Yahoo – AFP,
Olivia Rondonuwu, 17 Dec 2014
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A man
removes the fins from sharks at a traditional market in Tanjung Luar in
Lombok,
West Nusa Teggara, November 9, 2014 (AFP Photo/Sonny Tumbelaka)
|
Tanjung
Luar (Indonesia) (AFP) - Sharks are hauled ashore every day at a busy market on
the central Indonesian island of Lombok, the hub of a booming trade that
provides a livelihood for local fishermen but is increasingly alarming
environmentalists.
Now a
Singaporean is luring the fishermen away from Tanjung Luar market, where an
array of other sea creatures including manta rays and moray eels are also sold,
by offering them jobs as local guides for the growing number of tourists
visiting the island.
"The
whole dream is that there's enough tourists coming, not on a daily basis
because the corals would be affected, but maybe on a weekly basis," said
Kathy Xu, a former teacher who gave up her job to focus on the project.
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Vendors
sell freshly caught sharks at a
traditional market in Tanjung Luar in Lombok,
West Nusa Teggara, November 9, 2014
(AFP Photo/Sonny Tumbelaka)
|
But Xu
recognises that she faces an uphill battle to tackle a lucrative industry,
which is fuelled by demand for fins, particularly from China, and has
transformed the vast Indonesian archipelago into the world's biggest shark
fishery.
On a recent
visit by AFP to Tanjung Luar, 10 sharks were laid out on the dirty tiled floor
before being auctioned off, but an environmental group said on a busy day up to
300 are brought to the market.
"Sometimes
there are so many sharks we can't fit them all in here," Ismail, a
businessmen who finances local shark fishermen and goes by one name, told AFP.
So far Xu
has persuaded a handful of fishermen to work with tourists, mostly from
Singapore, taking them snorkelling on beautiful coral reefs and to secluded
white-sand beaches, on average twice a month.
She also
takes visitors to the market to raise awareness about the impact of
shark-fishing in Indonesia, where 110,000 tonnes are caught a year, according
to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization.
During a
recent tour, 25 Singaporean students aged 13 to 15 watched women transfer fish
from colourful baskets into buckets, workers sharpen their machetes and porters
haul sharks hung over their shoulders.
“Normally
you find out these problems from picture books, saying killing sharks for their
fins is bad, but they don't really go further than that and you don’t really
think about it anyway,” said 14-year-old Ray Chua.
World's
biggest shark fishery
![]() |
A man cuts
off the fins of a shark at a
traditional market in Tanjung Luar in
Lombok, West
Nusa Teggara, November
9, 2014 (AFP Photo/Sonny Tumbelaka)
|
"We
get much more money from hunting sharks than taking tourists to swim. On a
lucky day, I can get 10 times more for catching sharks," said Sulaiman,
who goes by one name.
While the
fins are sold on to China and other countries where they are considered a
delicacy, the rest of the shark is sliced up and its meat and skin made into
meatball soup and snacks that have become part of the local diet.
There has
even been a recent trend towards eating shark pups, which are being sold in
major grocery chains on the main island of Java, said shark protection
campaigner Riyanni Djangkaru.
Conservationists
have long been raising the alarm about shark-fishing in Indonesia, and point to
signs that populations have been declining around Tanjung Luar and across the
whole archipelago, which consists of over 17,000 islands.
The Lombok
market is one of the few where sharks are openly landed. In other parts of
country, fishermen hunt sharks in the open sea, slicing off their fins and
dumping them back in the water to die.
![]() |
Sharks for
sale at a traditional market in
Tanjung Luar in Lombok, West Nusa
Teggara,
November 9, 2014 (AFP Photo/
Sonny Tumbelaka)
|
Far more of
the creatures die when they are accidentally caught in trawlers' nets in places
such as Bali, central Sulawesi island and in the south of Java, than by
fishing, they say.
They say
the responsibility to protect the creatures should lie with the government.
Only one species of shark, the whale shark, currently enjoys full protection in
Indonesia and the few regulations that exist are not properly enforced, they
say.
At the
moment, it is left to conservationists and others such as Xu to help the
world's oldest predator. And while she recognises that her effort alone will
not be enough, the Singaporean is happy to do what she can.
"The
more I dived the more I got to see the sharks and they just grew on me,"
she said. "It is just too beautiful, and I don't want my grandchildren to
not get this experience."




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