{"id":47998,"date":"2021-06-17T14:36:00","date_gmt":"2021-06-17T14:36:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dev6.blazedream.in\/ICSF\/samudra\/a-new-beginning"},"modified":"2021-08-22T02:41:10","modified_gmt":"2021-08-22T02:41:10","slug":"a-new-beginning","status":"publish","type":"samudra","link":"https:\/\/www.icsf.net\/samudra\/a-new-beginning\/","title":{"rendered":"A new beginning"},"content":{"rendered":"

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Myanmar \/ SSF<\/p>\n

A New Beginning<\/strong><\/p>\n

A consultation organized in Myanmar to discuss the FAO guidelines for small-scale fisheries proved significant<\/strong><\/p>\n

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This article has been written by Nalini Nayak<\/strong> (nalini.nayak@gmail.com<\/a>), Member, ICSF<\/em><\/p>\n

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The consultations for the guidelines of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) on small-scale fisheries (SSF) have been rather extensive. In the case of Myanmar, they have also provided a possibility for the SSF community to participate in the process. It was also a first-time opportunity for the International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF) to interact with the fishworkers of Myanmar.<\/p>\n

The Myanmar consultation was organized jointly by the Myanmar Fisheries Federation (MFF), the National Activities Group (NAG) and ICSF in Yangon between 12 and 15 September 2012. It brought together 35 fishworkers (including five women) and their organizations from the three coastal States (administrative regions) of Myanmar. The participants also included 10 parliamentarians (including one woman) as well as non-governmental organizations (NGOs) like Oxfam, Green Earth and the Myanmar Livestock Group and the local FAO Programme Chief who participated on all three days. On the final day there were members who represented the State and national departments of fisheries and other concerned people from Yangon. The local press was well represented too. While the majority of the fishers were from the marine sector, there were a few from the inland fisherynearshore and brackishwater fishers as well as aquaculturists, mainly from the MFF.<\/p>\n

Having got involved with fishing communities in the delta region after the Nargis cyclone, NAG was ideally placed to do the organizational groundwork for the consultation. As elsewhere, the small-scale fishery of the delta is different from the fisheries of the two neighbouring regions. Since this was the first time the fishers of these regions were getting together, it was felt important for them to not only interact with one another but also to understand the specificities of the small-scale fisheries of each region. Hence the consultation shunned formalities and grand speeches and got down directly into serious work in the form of discussion groups. That was the pedagogy for the first two daysa series of group discussions followed by feedback at plenary sessions, concluding in responses from a panel of selected and representative participants.<\/p>\n

The four sessions focused on the following themes:<\/p>\n