Photo: Tommy Trenchard/IRIN. Tourism revival threatened by massive sand-mining
Source: IRIN
FREETOWN, 1 February 2013 (IRIN) - Round-the-clock sand-mining on
beaches within a few kilometres of Sierra Leone’s capital Freetown is
having a devastating effect on the coastline, destroying property, and
damaging the area’s hopes of a tourism revival.
Kolleh Bangura, the director of Sierra Leone’s Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA), is concerned about the rate of sand-removal from the
beaches. “It is getting worse,” he told IRIN, explaining that until
sand-mining began the rate of coastal erosion was around one metre per
year. “Now it is up to six metres [in certain places].”
“When they take sand from one part of the beach it upsets the balance, and triggers a direct hit on the coast,” he said.
In the village of Lakka whole stretches of coastline are littered with
the remains of buildings whose foundations have been washed from
underneath them as a result of sand-mining. Many coastal residents can
only watch as the coastline draws ever-nearer to their homes.
Balu Kargbo lives just a few feet away from a cliff of loose sand at the
edge of Hamilton Beach, 8 km from Freetown. She is very concerned about
the threat to her home but, like her neighbours, she cannot afford to
move. “The beach is getting shorter all the time,” she says.
Further down the beach an orphanage run by the NGO OrphFund is being
forced to relocate. “We went away for a month in May 2011,” said Kat
Cacavas, a volunteer worker at the orphanage, “and when we got back our
fence had disappeared.”
Since then, the cliff has receded another five metres. If the erosion
continues at the same rate, the building is unlikely to last more than
two years.
Tourism
“Sand-mining is a calamity for the tourism industry,” said the EPA’s
Bangura. “Anywhere in the world, sand is the resource of tourism, but
now our beaches are being degraded.”
Eimer Peters is the community development coordinator of Tribewanted, an
eco-tourism project on nearby John Obey beach. As well as employing
over 20 people, Tribewanted has built toilets and a well, and paid
‘goodwill’ money to the community, which is used, among other projects,
to pay teachers’ salaries at the local school.
But there are concerns that the sand-mining is jeopardizing the
village’s hopes of attracting tourists. The deep rumble of the trucks
can be clearly heard through the night while new rocks have appeared on
the beach as the sand is stripped away.
The neighbouring village of Bureh has long been a magnet for Freetown
residents looking to take a break from the city. Consequently, a
decision was taken not to mine sand there. But the effects of
sand-removal from nearby John Obey have had a dramatic effect on the
beach at Bureh - already fewer visitors are coming from Freetown, said
Peters. “The sea turtles didn’t come either this year,” she added.
No other jobs
The miners themselves acknowledge that sand-mining is not a sustainable
enterprise. “In time they need to ban it, as we want to bring tourism
here,” said Abu Bakarr, as he heaped sand onto one of about 40 waiting
trucks parked on Hamilton Beach. “But we need sand-mining to sustain our
lives… The government needs to give us jobs. If there are no jobs the
youths will mine the sand.”
More than 60 percent of Sierra Leonean youth is unemployed, the country’s National Youth Commission said in a recent report.
The miners point out that many infrastructure projects which contributed
to the recent re-election of President Ernest Bai Koroma are dependent
on the supply of sand. “Without sand-mining there is no building,” said
Samba Jalloh, a truck driver.
Bangura noted the relationship between development and sand-mining. “The
moment we started developing, we began to lose our sand,” he told IRIN.
Ten years after the end of the civil-war, construction is booming in
Sierra Leone.
According to the EPA, sand-mining is currently supposed to be banned on
all beaches apart from John Obey. But the ban is flouted openly and on a
massive scale. Even if a local ban is enforced, the mining simply goes
ahead after dark. “The police work 9am-5pm, so most of the mining now
happens at night,” said Bangura.
Obstacles
Vested interests are hampering efforts to address the issue: Miners need
the work, local chiefs are said to be getting rich taxing the sand, and
construction companies need a steady supply to continue their work.
The problem is further complicated by confusion over who has final
authority over regulating sand-mining. The Local Government Act,
introduced in 2004, devolved control over natural resources to local
councils, so the EPA feels powerless. “We want an outright ban,” said
Bangura, “but the council says if there is a ban it will provoke war.”
He sees providing alternative employment as the key to stopping
sand-mining. Projects are already under way to create more sustainable
jobs for young people on the peninsula, but mining pays well, and
progress has been slow.
Bangura is hopeful however that, in time, coastal communities will
realize the importance of preserving their beaches, and says he is
already seeing a shift in perception, as evidence of the destructive
effects of the mining becomes palpable. “Now that people can see the
impact, the pressure is starting to come from local communities, not
just agencies like before,” he said.