4U2FISH update 15 September 2020
We understand that this blog has been in-active, and the sole reason was #FINANCIALRESOURCES
Well that has been addressed, just a little, so you will soon be reading more about myself ( #Frankie2Socks ) and the many different efforts to get the issues of the closure of the St. Lucia estuary addressed at the highest levels, as the problems are diverse, plentiful and carry heavy financial burdens which the poorest of the poor are expected to bear the brunt of these costs.
#PeepSee our petition here
The primary issue here is the loss of economic opportunities associated with the natural renewable resources of Lake St. Lucia and surrounding waterways, which in the past sustained and supported a very large rural population, before the state in the form of (1) the old NPB, then (2) in the form of the IWPA, and its allies, within the various different government departments, manipulated financial and socioeconomic information to mislead many different organizations and world bodies about the true situation on the ground.
Basically the economies that were in place sustaining the rural populations around lake St. Lucia and interconnected waterways were ignored, then systematically destroyed, to ensure that the domestic tourism market, connected to the sustainable consumptive tourism associated with the natural renewable resources, within Umkhanyakude was removed from the equation.
In simple English NO FISHING .... No tourism associated with fishing.... lots of job losses....
In my opinion this is all about control and management of the largest tourism attraction in KZN, the old #Maputuland Coastline, or the iSimangaliso Wetland Park, and the surrounding rural areas. Big tourism companies are pushing hard to exclude the domestic tourism market, and ensure that only the international market exists. National government is involved in this push for international tourism at the exclusion of the South African Domestic tourism market.
These are vastly complicated issues, where local folks have been vilified, and through efficient and effective public perception management techniques, are currently perceived to be poachers, thieves and untrustworthy folks. The folks on the ground need their dignity returned, and their rights in terms of section 24 as quoted here, need to be addressed.
Please help this cause by sharing our posts and talking about the use of natural resources within the sustainable tourism sphere of influence.
#Frankie2Socks @ Bird Island lodge on the #Nibela #Peninsula for the #ReviveStLucia campaign
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