Photo: Becky McCray/Flickr. The Tonga are struggling to compete with commercial fishers who can afford to pay levies
Source: IRIN
BINGA, 29 September 2014 (IRIN) - The Tonga ethnic group, who make up
the majority of the estimated 200,000 people living in rural Binga
District in Zimbabwe's Matabeleland North Province, has for generations
depended on fishing for food and an income. But unaffordable government
levies are making their lives increasingly difficult.
Binga District is too dry to make crop farming viable. The area is also
under-developed despite being rich in mineral and timber resources. As a
result, local communities look to the Zambezi river for fish - mostly
bream and kapenta - for household consumption and sale to small-scale
and commercial buyers from urban centres as far afield as Harare, some
500km away. Income raised from the fish is used to buy other food items,
in addition to paying for school fees and medical expenses.
The Tonga used to enjoy unlimited access to the Zambezi but this started
changing about two decades ago when government departments - including
the Parks and Wildlife Management Authority, local district councils and
the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (ZIMRA) - began charging levies to fish
the river. The fees at first were small and the authorities were not
strict, but they have been increasing over the years, according to
Kudakwashe Munsaka, director of Siabuwa Development Trust, one of the
few community-based organizations fighting to promote the welfare of the
Tonga.
“For a long time, we have been lobbying government to develop our area
which is rich in natural resources. It is officially confirmed that
there are good coal, gold, tantalite, uranium and diamond deposits and
vast land under indigenous timber in this area but nothing is happening
and we wonder why,” said Munsaka.
“This leaves the Zambezi river as our only salvation… and there should
be unhindered access to it, but the problem is that the Tonga people are
now virtually barred from fishing from it because of prohibitive levies
and this is driving poverty levels up. Instead, the river is now
benefiting fishers and traders from the cities and towns who have the
money to pay the levies.”
Currently, anyone wishing to fish using nets or rods must pay US$5 a
day, while commercial fishers operating boats pay $2,500 to the parks
and wildlife authority every three months, $350 to ZIMRA and $40 per rig
per year to the rural council.
Fishing on the Zambezi river is dominated by commercial fishers from
urban areas who are charged the same levies as the locals but often sell
their catch in towns and cities at higher prices.
Unaffordable levies
“Where can the villagers get the $5 a day to pay to fish when almost all
of them are living on less than a dollar a day and are therefore
extremely poor? What it means is that they have to resort to sneaking in
to poach for fish or stay at home and starve,” said Munsaka.
Lainah Dube of the Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Development (ZIMCODD),
an NGO that promotes sustainable economic and social policies for local
communities and is helping villagers in Binga to improve their
livelihoods, said there was a need for the authorities to revisit the
amount of levies being charged. “We cannot afford them considering that
our markets have been dwindling. It would help if us locals pay less
than the outsiders,” she told IRIN.
She added that the authorities had also limited the times during which
fishers could cast their nets from between late afternoon to early
morning.
“This has compromised our production levels and we are feeling the brunt
because we hardly have anything to take home,” she said.
Those that are caught poaching often have to pay fines they cannot
afford. The parks authority fines poachers $20 while those with
unlicensed boats are charged $50.
Corruption at play?
Poaching has also given rise to corruption, according to Tracy Munenge,
34, a local mother of two who belongs to the Zubo Balizwi Trust, a
struggling women’s fishing cooperative. “The parks and council officials
leave you to fish and, at the end of the day, take whatever you caught,
saying you were poaching. They even follow the villagers to the local
shops where they will be selling their fish and take them away,” Munenge
told IRIN.
Caroline Washaya-Moyo, a spokesperson with Zimbabwe’s Parks and Wildlife
Management Authority, insisted that wardens from her department were
not corrupt and told IRIN: “We have always heard these complaints about
the Tonga people being alienated from the Zambezi river, but we are
operating within our mandate.”
She added that the levies would stay as they were a means of
discouraging uncontrolled fishing that might lead to the depletion of
fish or the extinction of some types of water life.
However, John Robertson, an economist, said the local authorities, ZIMRA
and the parks authority were using the levies to boost their small
budgets.
“All these departments are operating on shoe-string budgets and they are
just too happy to descend on the fishers to raise income for their own
use,” he told IRIN.
Fishing cooperatives struggle to survive
The Zubo fishing cooperative started in 2011 with funding from UN Women
but, according to Munenge, since some of the original members left and
levies have increased every year, it is no longer viable. “At the
beginning, things worked out well. There were 10 of us and two men who
worked as captains. We used to share profits at the end of every month
and managed to pay the levies. Only five are left now but, even then, we
are not operating the rig because we are in arrears,” she said.
She added that scores of other villagers had joined fishing cooperatives
in an attempt to pool resources for the payment of levies, but that all
of them were struggling or had folded and that many were now resorting
to poaching while others had turned to craft making for a living -
weaving baskets or making furniture from the timber that is abundant in
the district. But such ventures are still small-scale due to the lack of
access to finance.
Salani Nyirenda, 69, a village head from Binga South, who remembers a
time when the Tonga people had unfettered access to the river, said:
“Government must allow us complete freedom to fish from the river. We
must also be let to set up vegetable gardens along the river and there
is need for irrigation schemes along the Zambezi. We would use the
vegetables to feed our families and sell to the towns and cities. There
is so much poverty here.”
He said national parks authorities had banned them from setting up gardens along the river.
Francis Mukora of the Zimbabwe Community Development Trust (ZCDT), an
NGO that campaigns for members of disadvantaged communities, said while
the authorities were acting within the law by imposing levies,
preventing the Tonga from fishing the Zambezi contradicted government
policy to empower its citizens.
“This limits these communities’ access to their major source of income
and fuels poverty and food insecurity while depriving them of highly
nutritional but affordable food. While other people have been given
farms [through the land reform programme], people from Binga must be
empowered through adequate access to the Zambezi,” he told IRIN.