{"id":48358,"date":"2021-06-17T17:53:00","date_gmt":"2021-06-17T17:53:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dev6.blazedream.in\/ICSF\/samudra\/lake-appeal"},"modified":"2021-08-23T04:53:54","modified_gmt":"2021-08-23T04:53:54","slug":"lake-appeal","status":"publish","type":"samudra","link":"https:\/\/www.icsf.net\/samudra\/lake-appeal\/","title":{"rendered":"Lake Appeal"},"content":{"rendered":"

Tanzania \/ SSF GUIDELINES<\/p>\n

Lake Appeal<\/strong><\/p>\n

A workshop in Tanzania focused on building capacity to improve small-scale fisheries in the context of food security and poverty eradication<\/strong><\/p>\n


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This article is by Editrudith Lukanga<\/b> (elukanga@gmail.com), Executive Director, EMEDO, Tanzania<\/em><\/p>\n


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The Tanzania national capacity-building workshop towards implementation of the Voluntary Guidelines for Sustainable Small-scale Fisheries in the Context of Food Security and Poverty Eradication (SSF Guidelines) took place at Monarch Hotel, Mwanza, on 31 August and 1 September 2016. It was attended by 52 participants (45 per cent, women), representing a wide spectrum of small-scale fisheries stakeholders, including civil society organizations (CSOs), academia, research institutuions, the government, fisheries training institution, private sector organizations and the women fish processors and traders from the major great lakes of Tanzania, namely; Victoria, Nyasa and Tanganyika. This was the first workshop conducted in the counry since the adoption of the SSF Guidelines by the FAO Committee on Fisheries (COFI) at its 31st Session in Rome in June 2014.<\/p>\n

The workshop aimed to set a stage for implementing the SSF Guidelines in Tanzania. More than a half of the participants were hearing about the guidelines for the very first time; hence there was a need to first raise awareness to improve understanding of the SSF Guidelines and their guiding principles; and their relevance for resolving some of the issues confronting fishing communities at the intra- and inter-sectoral levels in the inland fisheries in Tanzania as well as to to identify strategies to be put in place in order to implement the SSF Guidelines.<\/p>\n

The workshop was organized around plenary presentations and discussions, and working group sessions. There were ten plenary presentations. The first was an overview on the small-scale fisheries guidelines described in the SSF Guidelines, drawing on the 2008 Bangkok Global Conference on Small-scale Fisheries towards securing Sustainable Small-scale Fisheries, during which the idea for putting a specific focus on small-scale fisheries was conceived, and going forward to June 2014 when the 31st session of COFI endorsed the SSF Guidelines.<\/p>\n

The two presentations that followed were meant to give a background to the workshop. They included a feedback on the East Africa Consultation Workshop on improving small-scale fisheries in the context of food security and poverty eradication that was hosted by the FAO Sub-Regional Office for Eastern Africa in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, during 15-18 September 2015. The workshop facilitated an understanding of the principles of the SSF Guidelines and their application in order to support their implementation for sustainable small-scale fisheries at regional and national levels. The third presentation highlighted the important and significant role played by CSOs in the SSF Guidelines development process.<\/p>\n

Thematic areas<\/strong><\/p>\n

Of particular interest were the plenary presentations that unpacked the contents of the key thematic areas of the SSF Guidelines, namely,governance of tenure in small-scale fisheries and resource management; social development, employment and decent work; value chains, post-harvest and trade; gender equality; and disaster risks and climate change. The role of research in the implementation of the guidelines was also explored.<\/p>\n

Resource materials for capacity-building programmes were developed prior to, and during, the workshop to be used as training tools for future training programmes.<\/p>\n

Videos developed with the support of the International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF) were played to aide in raising awareness on (i) the role and place of women in the fisheries value chain, (ii) the challenges that women face and (iii) the efforts in place to improve the situation. The video clips raised a dialogue among workshop participants who acknowledged that they have been powerful tools for training and capacity building towards implementation of the SSF Guidelines. Issues that were aired through the videos are real and reflect the actual situation the women face and therefore efforts are needed to ensure that women in the small-scale fisheries sector get proper recognition and due attention in terms of favourable policies and development that is economically, socially and environmentally sustainable, through a human-rights-based approach.<\/p>\n

A summarized Swahili version of the SSF Guidelines?was also very helpful. Most of the Swahili-speaking participants expressed their appreciation for having the draft Swahili version that would help them give feedback to their organizations.<\/p>\n

The the key proceedings of the workshop were filmed, and video clips of interviews highlighting key issues on inland fisheries in Tanzania ?have been produced to be used to promote awareness as training material for future workshops.<\/p>\n

In order to further unpack and contextualize the SSF Guidelines’ thematic areas, the participants were divided into six working groups to identify issues, decide what needs to be done, identify responsibilities, and discuss how the SSF Guidelines can be used to improve the situation of small-scale fisheries.<\/p>\n