 | The tranquility of the fishing village of Zacarias and the Maricá Lagoon does not reflect the threats faced by its residents. Credit: Mario Osava/IPS | Report Brazilian Fisherfolk Fight for Survival By Mario Osava
Fisherfolk cannot be forced into becoming fish
farmers, maintains the leader of a campaign to
establish protected areas for artisanal fishing in
Brazil. “I am a fisherwoman, I don’t know how to do
anything else and I don’t want to,” she declared.
RIO DE JANEIRO, Aug 6 (Tierramérica).- His father and other fishermen fought back with
sickles, hoes and other work tools against the
armed men sent by the purported owner of the land
where they lived in order to evict them. But then
the military police came and knocked down eight of
their houses.
Their outrage reached the boiling point after the
eviction of a family with five children suffering
from paralysis, “thrown out onto the street,”
Vilson Correa told Tierramérica. Luckily, the
local mayor ordered a halt to the operation and
the reconstruction of their homes, “because he had
a relative” in the evicted community.
Correa was nine years old in 1970 when this
incident took place, and his own house was among
those destroyed. It was his “baptism by fire” in
the struggle to preserve the fishing village of
Zacarias, in the municipality of Maricá, 60 km
from Rio de Janeiro, against successive attempts
to displace the community through threats and
violence.
Today, as president of the Community Culture and
Recreation Association of the Fisherpeople of
Zacarias, founded in 1943, he is facing a
particularly daunting challenge: the construction
of a large tourism, residential and commercial
complex that could spell the death of the
traditional way of life of his people.
The village of Zacarias, home to some 100
families, exemplifies the pressures endured by
small-scale artisanal fisherfolk in Brazil,
exacerbated in recent years by economic expansion
in the form of large-scale energy, logistics and
tourism projects.
Hydroelectric dams that number in the dozens on
some rivers and are now invading the Amazon basin
displace riverine communities and alter the
ecology of rivers, with obvious impacts on
traditional fishing practices. Industrial and
tourism ports and complexes are constructed in
bays and other ecosystems normally propitious for
the reproduction of fish and shellfish.
Oil drilling, which is primarily carried out
offshore in Brazil, is another enemy of artisanal
fishing, not only because of frequent spills, but
also the construction of extensive infrastructure
such as ports and pipelines.
In response to this growing encroachment on the
areas where they earn their livelihood, the
Movement of Artisanal Fishermen and Fisherwomen of
Brazil, established during the first national
conference of fisherfolk in 2009, launched a
campaign in June for the creation of traditional
fishing community territories.
Their goal is to collect the 1.38 million
signatures needed to request the adoption of a law
that recognizes and guarantees the right of
fisherfolk to territories, including land and
water, where they can earn a living from their
work and preserve their culture.
The Brazilian Congress is obliged to accept
legislative proposals from the public when they
are backed by the support of at least one percent
of the electorate, in accordance with the 1988
Constitution. Four bills tabled in this way have
already been passed into law.
Unlike indigenous peoples and “quilombolas”
(communities comprised of the descendants of
escaped African slaves), there is currently no
legislation that provides for the demarcation of
areas for exclusive and collective use by
fisherfolk. Their rights are recognized, however,
as one of the traditional peoples of this country
of more than 192 million inhabitants.
The development promoted by the Brazilian
government fosters “the privatization of bodies of
water” and large-scale industrial aquaculture, to
the detriment of small-scale fishing, said María
José Pacheco of the Pastoral Council for
Fisherfolk, a Catholic organization that supports
the movement from Olinda in northeast Brazil.
According to Pacheco, small-scale fisherfolk
provide 70 percent of the fish consumed in the
country, which means that defending artisanal
fishing is also a question of food security and
sovereignty.
The establishment of small-scale fishing
territories would guarantee the “physical and
cultural survival” of fishing communities and
their particular world view, which is not based on
the accumulation of wealth, but rather on “living
in harmony with nature,” Pacheco told
Tierramérica.
The Pastoral Council estimates that there are 1.5
million fisherpeople in Brazil, while there were
853,231 registered with the Ministry of Fisheries
and Aquaculture in late 2010. Official statistics
are unreliable, even with regard to fish
production, and exclude many women who work in the
sector, said Pacheco.
“Resistance is a form of victory in itself,”
declared Marizelha Lopes, a fisherwoman from the
northeastern state of Bahia and one of the
coordinators of the campaign to demand artisanal
fishing territories. Oil, hydroelectric dams and
shrimp farms are the primary threats to small-
scale fisherfolk in the northeast.
The expansion of fish farming has led to the
destruction of mangrove forests vital for the
preservation of marine life, explained Lopes. She
is one of 11 brothers and sisters who all earn
their livelihood from fishing in Maré Island,
where “80 percent of the 8,000 inhabitants” are
fisherfolk. The island is near Salvador, the
capital of Bahia and a large market for fish.
“We’re not against progress, as long as
aquaculture and mega projects do not make
artisanal fishing impossible,” she said. And
fisherfolk cannot be forced into becoming fish
farmers, she told Tierramérica. “I am a
fisherwoman, I don’t know how to do anything else
and I don’t want to.”
So-called extractive reserves (RESEX), areas in
which traditional peoples utilize natural
resources in a sustainable and limited way, are a
potentially viable alternative for fisherfolk. The
reserves were born from the struggle of
"seringueiros" or rubber tappers against the
deforestation caused by loggers and farmers.
In Arraial do Cabo, in the north of the state of
Rio de Janeiro, a Marine RESEX has been created
which benefits 300 families, stressed Carlos Minc,
the secretary of the environment for the state, in
response to criticisms for his authorization of
projects that affect small-scale fishing.
But both RESEX and demarcated indigenous and
quilombola territories continue to be invaded by
large landholders and companies, said José Carlos
Feitosa, a fisherman faced with different
conflicts in the Amazon region.
Feitosa lives in Aveiro, on the banks of the
Tapajós River, a large tributary of the Amazon,
where the government plans to construct five large
hydroelectric dams in the coming years. “It will
be the death of the Tapajós,” warned Feitosa, a
member of a community of close to 2,000
fisherfolk, who make their living from “a river
that still holds an abundance of fish.”
Maricá was a major supplier of fish for the city
of Rio de Janeiro three decades ago, with an
output of 60 to 70 tons per week. Today it is the
source of barely five tons, commented Roberto
Ferraz, general secretary of the Federation of
Artisanal Fisherpeople’s Associations in the
state.
Nevertheless, Correa is determined to keep up the
struggle to defend the fishing village of Zacarias
that was begun by his grandparents back in the
1940s, when a landowner arrived with official
documents claiming that the land occupied by the
fishing community was his, despite the fact that
“they had been living there for three centuries.”
The threat facing the village today is the
construction of four hotels, a residential
complex, shopping centers and golf courses as part
of a real estate development known as Fazenda São
Bento da Lagoa, which includes the fishing
village.
The new owner of the land and the development
project, IDB Brasil, a real estate company managed
by the Spanish group Cetya, has pledged in its
publicity that it will “regularize the land tenure
of the fishing community of Zacarias” in addition
to undertaking environmental measures such as
reforestation of the area with native tree species
and the treatment of all wastewater.
But the fisherfolk view the real estate
development project as a threat to their very
survival. And their environmentalist allies fear
that it will destroy the biodiversity of the
“restinga”, a distinct coastal ecosystem that
separates the large Maricá Lagoon from the ocean. * |