Residents along Foropa, Sangana axis of the Atlantic coastline
in Bayelsa have reported sighting dead fishes littering the shoreline.
Some of the residents who spoke on the development said the occurrence
was noticed since March 15 and was yet to abate fueling fears of pollution of
the country’s territorial waters by toxic substances.
Mr Leghemo Ebrasin, a youth leader said the development was
strange and could be an indication of increased toxicity of the Atlantic ocean
which could impact residents.
Ebrasin who hails from Koluama a settlement
on the Atlantic shoreline, Southern Ijaw ocal Government Area of Bayelsa urged
oil firms operating in the area to close ranks with the oil industry regulators
to trace the source of the pollution.
“The residents on the shoreline are
concerned and worried about what is happening with the coastline littered with
dead fishes, the maritime environment supports our livelihood which is fishing.
“The same environment hosts oil
operations with several oil blocks in the area operated by many oil firms and I
believe the safety of their operational environment should be of concern to the
operators of these oilfields too.
“There is need for an industry-wide joint
investigation involving the regulators and all operators with community and
government representatives at the three ties to find out the cause of massive
death of fish species.
“My parents are both in the fishing
vocation and have refraimed from going to fish out of concerns for the public
health implication of contaminated toxic fish.,” the youth leader said.
Michael Owin, who resides at Sangana, a coastline settlement in
Bayelsa, said that the people have been seeing dead fishes washed and dropped
by the tide on a daily basis from middle of March.
According to him, some unsuspecting people have picked the dead
fishes taking them for ‘stranded’ and eaten them.
“It is not unusual to find fishes dropped at the coastline after
the tide goes down but the number is making us curious to suspect that the
marine ecosystem must be getting much toxic.
“The common fish species here are known to be resilient and
sensitive, one would have expected them to migrate deeper but their death in
numbers may be an indication of crisis,” he said.
Ebi Seigha, a fisherman in Southern Ijaw Local Government Area
told NAN that the fishing communities were worried at the development, adding
that they were concerned about the health safety of their catch.
Another resident at Foropa, coastline community in Bayelsa Mr Ekemeghesuotei
Sese said an environmental audit of materials used by oil companies was
desirable to ascertain the safety of people in the area.
He said that such a development was capable of wiping of
species of sea creatures in the food chain.
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