The coastal "lockdown" and the curfew mean a raw deal for Carenage fishermen-and ultimately consumers-and none of it will taste even remotely as good as sushi. In fact, fish may be in short supply to even make the popular Japanese raw fish delicacy, much less fish broth. That's the word from Carenage fishermen who are floundering in the effects of the state of emergency (SoE) and curfew, much as they say the fishing-eating public will be. Fishermen in the "hot spot" constituency of PNM leader Keith Rowley had already been frustrated by the slow completion of the Carenage fishing complex and what they describe as inadequate facilities.
They were also among the first fishermen hard hit when the SoE's initial 9 pm to 5 am curfew in mainly northern areas and San Fernando curbed their night fishing schedules. "...But now, is worse body blows," says Maxwell "Haniff" La Forest. Yesterday's (Sunday morning) sunshine was bright on the Carenage water. Boats were bobbing at anchor behind the complex. Eastwards down the road at the well-known roadside Carenage stall, vendors were cutting up and selling a recent catch for a couple of customers. More scenes like that, however, are not guaranteed at the fish prices already resulting from the SoE/curfew.
At Carenage's fishing complex, La Forest says:
"Despite the relaxed curfew, the new coastal curfew means you cutting fishing time by more than half, cutting the catch by the same thing and increasing our production costs same way...So naturally, fish prices gone up and going up almost 150 per cent." Regis, barebacked like the rest of the men at the complex, reel off the new prices of fish:
• Kingfish-$28 a pound.
• Redfish-$20 a pound.
• Bluefish-$20 a pound.
"....Cro Cro supposed to be the cheapest fish it was $5 a pound...Is now $16 a pound!" declares Regis.
At 31, La Forest has been fishing all his life and has two kids and one on the way. "Normally we go out (to sea) at 9 pm and catch bait, then start fishing later at night...We can't do that now if it have a 11 pm to 4 am curfew extending three miles out to sea," he says. "So we have to spend more time outside to catch fish but time we don't have because of curfew. "We can't even say we going out further than the coastal curfew area and staying out all night to fish til the curfew lift, because the Coast Guard harassing us."
Evo John, who wears a large gold chain adds: "On Saturday, a youth tie up a boat, fishing right off the pier here (behind the complex) and Coast Guard run him...They come with masks on their face." Lester, pointing to the right, adds: "Coast Guard stop me from even using a fish pot (trap) off there-where they expect us to fish?" La Forest adds: "They pressure us saying we can't catch certain species-kingfish, carite-but we're in the water every day. We know when some stocks down. We move according to that. "We only net some fish when it plentiful, like breeding season and we don't overfish that either-we ent stupid to fish out everything," he says.
"We know we have to catch and leave some to have more for later months." Regis adds: "As it is too, nobody waiting round to try and get best price. "When a man come in tired from the North Coast because he have to work doubly hard to make a catch in this situation, he just sell it to the nearest vendor for whatever price...we losing all round," he says. Living on the water's edge, La Forest and other fishermen are increasingly bitter about what they see as unfair targeting not only on political-PNM- profiling but racial and class basis as well. If the police appear to be only netting "fry dry" from SoE operations, Carenage fishermen believe they should look to higher ground for "real big fish" and should have been doing it a long time ago.
La Forest says: "Only poor people getting hit in this. Government isn't studying the repercussions of this (SoE)! The rich have money to cushion the effect on them. Government never stop people from leaving the airport, you think any drug lord still in T&T after August 21? "Poor people feeling every inch of hard road of this (SoE) and still being innocent victims from this, even if they not getting rob or kill. "When you squeeze fishing villages where people have limited skill beyond fishing, it encourages illegal things-slavery never finish and will never finish and crime will never stop," declares La Forest. Along the concrete pier behind the complex there are no lights or rails on the structure which is still in a rough stage.
Throwing fishing lines are two East Indian guys, Roshard, a car parts employee of San Juan and his friend from Massachusetts. His friend who said he came to T&T to set up business, says he's changed his mind. Fixing his cap, he says: "The Government uses too drastic measures. My girlfriend from Ghana, watches T&T's Internet pages daily and she says there'll be ethnic cleansing here. Roshard who says he's a PP supporter says: "Government needs to tread cautiously because a race situation could result...I was in a car last week with an Indian girl in front seat. The Negro lady behind was really quarrelling about 'Indian doing this and PP dat..'
"She knew there were Indian people in the car and she didn't care, she was so upset and frustrated...That kind of thing could boil up later." Roshard adds: "It's sensitive. The Muslims had to do Eid prayers with an 9 pm to 5 am curfew, but Hindus have a lighter 9 pm to 4 am curfew. You see police on camera cussing a TV6 reporter last week, much less for what he might be doing when TV cameras not on. "And you can't really say the SoE cut crime out because things still happening. They need to watch it." By then it's 10.30 am but the duo is not catching much. "The fish an' all here on curfew," laughs Roshard.