Berliner Boersenzeitung - Syria fishermen despair at water loss, river pollution

EUR -
AED 4.066966
AFN 75.889727
ALL 98.929553
AMD 428.701828
ANG 1.994756
AOA 1056.864614
ARS 1073.71773
AUD 1.60485
AWG 1.993035
AZN 1.879279
BAM 1.956051
BBD 2.234716
BDT 132.266953
BGN 1.956939
BHD 0.417367
BIF 3226.913595
BMD 1.107242
BND 1.42627
BOB 7.647738
BRL 5.996319
BSD 1.106807
BTN 92.962977
BWP 14.591409
BYN 3.622132
BYR 21701.941549
BZD 2.230915
CAD 1.493276
CDF 3175.011399
CHF 0.938819
CLF 0.036217
CLP 999.374375
CNY 7.792809
CNH 7.780163
COP 4679.027177
CRC 571.868132
CUC 1.107242
CUP 29.341911
CVE 110.275648
CZK 25.316024
DJF 197.089031
DKK 7.459367
DOP 66.998587
DZD 146.869026
EGP 53.559478
ERN 16.608629
ETB 132.377282
FJD 2.42508
FKP 0.84323
GBP 0.833144
GEL 3.017257
GGP 0.84323
GHS 17.486689
GIP 0.84323
GMD 76.963926
GNF 9556.224826
GTQ 8.556097
GYD 231.452349
HKD 8.59584
HNL 27.522528
HRK 7.52815
HTG 145.938705
HUF 399.570554
IDR 16918.656473
ILS 4.192029
IMP 0.84323
INR 92.98462
IQD 1449.885833
IRR 46601.040186
ISK 149.908994
JEP 0.84323
JMD 174.656865
JOD 0.78459
JPY 160.268848
KES 142.778745
KGS 93.452683
KHR 4511.435626
KMF 492.667419
KPW 996.517097
KRW 1462.755429
KWD 0.338461
KYD 0.922289
KZT 534.801641
LAK 24439.359875
LBP 99112.270323
LKR 326.5089
LRD 214.160679
LSL 19.247967
LTL 3.269398
LVL 0.66976
LYD 5.249507
MAD 10.796084
MDL 19.36287
MGA 5051.487774
MKD 61.61595
MMK 3596.278551
MNT 3762.40798
MOP 8.850855
MRU 43.729605
MUR 51.209969
MVR 17.006834
MWK 1919.185317
MXN 21.605634
MYR 4.621072
MZN 70.730295
NAD 19.247967
NGN 1847.5659
NIO 40.735221
NOK 11.672576
NPR 148.740362
NZD 1.761511
OMR 0.426292
PAB 1.106807
PEN 4.114927
PGK 4.404565
PHP 62.186054
PKR 307.249605
PLN 4.29588
PYG 8623.832721
QAR 4.03469
RON 4.97687
RSD 117.03214
RUB 104.628726
RWF 1499.144758
SAR 4.155657
SBD 9.181874
SCR 14.576709
SDG 666.004514
SEK 11.34939
SGD 1.426853
SHP 0.84323
SLE 25.297491
SLL 23218.303659
SOS 632.56108
SRD 33.987939
STD 22917.672143
SVC 9.683935
SYP 2781.97846
SZL 19.243466
THB 36.295551
TJS 11.765508
TMT 3.875347
TND 3.370202
TOP 2.593268
TRY 37.897276
TTD 7.506894
TWD 35.279493
TZS 3017.233916
UAH 45.678011
UGX 4065.392556
USD 1.107242
UYU 46.105909
UZS 14100.807308
VEF 4011042.008132
VES 40.805431
VND 27310.121852
VUV 131.453985
WST 3.097468
XAF 656.020346
XAG 0.035225
XAU 0.000418
XCD 2.992376
XDR 0.816797
XOF 656.020346
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.170368
ZAR 19.259222
ZMK 9966.509542
ZMW 28.969797
ZWL 356.531445
  • RBGPF

    59.5000

    59.5

    +100%

  • NGG

    0.3800

    70.05

    +0.54%

  • GSK

    -0.5800

    40.3

    -1.44%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    24.77

    +0.2%

  • AZN

    0.7600

    78.67

    +0.97%

  • SCS

    -0.2900

    13.2

    -2.2%

  • BP

    0.7000

    32.09

    +2.18%

  • RIO

    -0.0100

    71.16

    -0.01%

  • RELX

    -0.1200

    47.34

    -0.25%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    7.03

    +1.42%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    36.45

    -0.36%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    24.94

    +0.64%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    9.95

    -0.7%

  • BCC

    0.4100

    141.39

    +0.29%

  • JRI

    -0.1400

    13.53

    -1.03%

  • BCE

    0.0300

    34.83

    +0.09%

Syria fishermen despair at water loss, river pollution
Syria fishermen despair at water loss, river pollution / Photo: Delil souleiman - AFP

Syria fishermen despair at water loss, river pollution

Around war-torn Syria's biggest freshwater dam reservoir, fishermen say their catch is now a fraction of what it used to be as environmental pressures have decimated aquatic life.

Text size:

Ismail Hilal, 50, sat on the hull of his rowboat -- now lodged firmly on the shores of Lake Assad -- as gentle waves washed in, talking about the way of life he has lost.

After 37 years as a fisherman, he has retired his nets, declaring defeat as fish stocks have declined, water levels have dropped and pollution has worsened in the Euphrates and the dam reservoir it feeds.

"I have spent my whole life on the water, since childhood," said Hilal, a father of seven. "But I was forced to stop this year. I couldn't live on fishing anymore."

Syria has endured more than a decade of civil war, and the nearby town of Raqa was the centre of the Islamic State group's brutal "caliphate" until their ouster in 2017.

The battered country, where half a million died in the conflict, has also suffered the impacts of climate change, from searing summer heat to prolonged drought.

The flow of the Euphrates -- one of the region's mighty streams, where the world's earliest civilisations flourished -- has been further impacted by upstream dams in Turkey.

Other fishermen AFP spoke to also blamed the river's low water levels, lack of rainfall, worsening pollution and overfishing for the sharp decline in fish stocks.

Fishermen now "barely take in five percent" of their catch from former times, Hilal said.

He now works in a restaurant in Tabqa, on the eastern edge of the lake, toiling in front of a flaming hot oven and preparing and grilling fish instead of catching them.

- 'Downward spiral' -

The Euphrates, said to have nourished the biblical Garden of Eden, runs for almost 2,800 kilometres (1,700 miles) through Turkey, Syria and Iraq, where it empties into the sea.

From the Turkish border, it flows southeast across Syria, irrigating its breadbasket region and filling the reservoirs of three hydroelectric dams that provide drinking water and electricity for millions.

Lake Assad is the biggest reservoir, stretching across 600 square kilometres (230 square miles).

But its water level has dropped by four metres (12 feet) since last year, says Dutch peace-building group PAX, which blames a "downward spiral of drought and water shortages".

The lack of water and the pollution are "driving further biodiversity loss along the lakes and rivers" in Syria's north and east, said the group's Wim Zwijnenburg.

Raqa province received only 208 mm per month of rainfall last year, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization.

An AFP team visiting Lake Assad saw vast plumes of algae -- an indicator of pollution, according to experts, that sucks oxygen from the water and kills aquatic life.

- 'Disastrous' situation -

When Ali Shebli, 37, a fisherman like his father, pulled in his long green nets, they were empty except for a few bits of the seagrass that now chokes some shallow areas.

"In the past, we could take in 50 kilogrammes of fish" per day, he said. "But now we barely get one or two kilos, and sometimes nothing ... because of the low water level and the pollution".

Shebli, who struggles to support his wife, three children and his ill father, said the falling fish stocks had made the family's situation "disastrous".

The crisis has impacted the wider local economy.

Fish are displayed on blocks of ice at a market in nearby Raqa, a town under Kurdish control since the IS was ousted by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces.

But fishmonger Ragheb Ismail, 45, scaling fresh fish on a bench, said what is on offer now is a far cry from the times when there were "tons of fish" for sale.

"Now even the biggest fishmonger has no more than 200 kilogrammes on offer because of the drought, the lack of water and the high temperatures," he said.

These days, he said with frustration, there are plenty of customers but "not enough fish".

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)