Village Revelations
At first glance, the rugged islands seem uninhabited, but a closer look would reveal 100 or so villages scattered throughout the region, primarily on the few islands level enough to erect simple homes.

Our time in the villages revealed the incredibly complex
pressures facing the marine environment and those who depend on it. In Yellu,
the first village we visited, trash piled in the streets and decayed in heaps
along the water line. All of Indonesia lacks the infrastructure to deal with
waste. The solution in Raja Ampat is to simply throw garbage in the ocean,
where a storm surge or current will eventually scatter it, littering beautiful
beaches and poisoning marine life.

The waters surrounding Yellu were murky and devoid of
life. Silt smothered the
corals. Only a spattering of trees
remained on the hillsides. Houses
filled every inch of flat land and then spilled out across the water. Depending
on who you ask immigration rates vary, but many suggest that Yellu has
transformed from a quiet town of only a few hundred to a crowded and polluted
village supporting almost 2,000 people.
Half of those newcomers came to Yellu to work in the oyster pearl farms
– a relatively new but booming industry that’s drawing outsiders to Raja Ampat
in droves.

While in Yellu, we photographed and interviewed artisanal
fishermen who gather their catch with simple nylon handlines from dugout canoes
(some with modern sputtering motors). Historically fish were caught for local
consumption, but now many fishers have now been lured by the lucrative live
fish trade.

They seek out the biggest groupers and wrasse, which bring
the greatest profit. But these targeted efforts have diminished local fish
populations. Fishers have to
travel further and further to get an adequate supply. Once caught, the fish are
stored in crowded ocean pens and injected with antibiotics to stave off
infection. Once a month or so a ship from Hong Kong arrives, scoops up the
penned fish and returns to sell them as “fresh” caught fish in the Asian live
fish trade.

Raja Ampat has remained lush and intact largely through
supporting a historically small population size, roughly 35,000 people in a
region about the size of France. But it has turned into one of Indonesia’s
fastest growing regions. Now Raja Ampat must support this burgeoning
population, growing at more than five percent a year, and a global fish
market. We can look to the boom
and bust trends of most global fisheries to realize the outcome. The environment and all those who
depend on it will surely suffer.

But not every village has succumbed to these foreign
interests. In Fafanlap, a village
just one half hour from Yellu, locals still handline for subsistence fishing
only. Oyster fishers have yet to settle in. Fafanlap supports one-third the population of Yellu. There’s less trash in the streets, the
waters are cleaner and lush tracts of virgin forests surround the village.

New economical pressures possess incredible power and the
outcome is uncertain, but we left the villages feeling inspired. Raja Ampat
harbors intoxicating beauty and unparalleled biodiversity. Under Hak Adat, every village has ownership of their local
ocean. Our interviews uncovered a
deep pride attached to that responsibility and a knowledge that marine
resources are not inexhaustible.
People were eager to use their rights to find ways to protect their
waters for generations to come. We’re doing our best to convey and contribute
to that effort.
Tags: "live fish trade" "live reef fish trade" "artisanal fishing" "tuna" "cassandra brooks" "raja ampat" indonesia misool "misool eco resort" papua
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