Even though fish bombing is illegal in Malaysia,
it has been widespread in the state of Sabah, a
popular place for divers, for ages. But the method is
getting more attention now, since it was apparently
used to deliberately kill divers last month.
Divemaster Ab Zainal Abdu, 30, and Chinese
divers Zhao Zheng and Xu Ying Jie, both 26, were
diving near the island of Pulau Kalapuan on the
afternoon of July 5 when the incident took place.
They went out with a boat driver and another dive
guide, who later told the police they had dropped
the trio off at the dive site at around 2:30 p.m.
When they returned an hour later to pick the divers
up, they found sea foam around the area (a sign of
fish bombing) but no divers, so they called for assistance.
When police arrived, they found a lot of dead
fish, damage to nearby coral, the divers' equipment, and finally the diver's bodies, at 20 feet deep, which
were sent to the hospital for a post-mortem.
After indications pointed to fish bombing, Sabah
police said the deaths were homicide, with Abdu
most likely the murder target, and the Chinese
divers tragically as collateral damage. The police
launched a manhunt, and the next day, they arrested
two suspects: the boat driver and the guide who
took Abdu and the divers to Pulau Kalapuan, as
well as 10 others, including sea gypsies.
Fish bombing, also known as dynamite fishing,
is a widespread and severe problem in many
tropical coral reef areas around Southeast Asia, as
well as in East Africa and Central America. Some
fishermen use unexploded grenades left over
from previous conflicts, but most make their own
explosives from chemicals in fertilizer and other easy-to-access ingredients, which they place inside
beer bottles. The explosions create shock waves
that stun or kill fish, causing them to float to the
surface or sink to the bottom for easy collection.
The bombing also causes massive damage to the
coral reefs and marine life -- the nonprofit foundation
Reef Check cites studies showing that reef
sites blasted more than a decade ago still have
little to no signs of recovery. Blast fishers expose
themselves to serious injury and possible death,
but that apparently isn't much of a hindrance for
poverty-stricken people.
The joke among Malaysian dive operators is
that those engaged in fish bombing do it openly
in daylight, because there is no legal enforcement.
One Malaysian dive guide told us about an incident
last October while helping two divers look
for hawksbill turtles and pygmy seahorses in Tun Sakaran Marine Park. He heard loud booms while
underwater, and when surfacing, he saw a speedboat
with three youths in it. His boat driver headed
over so he could remind them fish bombing in the
marine park was prohibited, but he was rewarded
with threats to light another bomb to be thrown at
his boat. He and the boat driver wisely decided to
withdraw, then reported the incident when they
got back to Semporna, 22 miles away, but no action
was taken.
Semporna is the departure point for divers going
to Sipadan and staying at the Mabul island resort.
Jacques Cousteau described Sipadan as one of
the most precious marine ecological places on the
planet, but unfortunately now, it's a place where
you can hear fish bombing nearly every day, even
though the explosives may be detonated two or
three miles away from where they're diving.
Dive instructor Emmanuele Girellie told the New
Straits Times last month that it's common to hear
bombing sounds while diving at Tunku Abdul
Rahman Park, a marine area under the jurisdiction
of Sabah Parks. "The sudden loud sound scares
everyone, even the instructors! When it is closer, we
sometimes think one of our O-rings has just blown,
until a few seconds later, when we realize that it
was due to a fish bombing.
Tourist Suraidah Roslan also told the newspaper
she was shaken up when she heard the sound of a
fish bomb exploding for the first time, while diving
in Kota Belud. Despite the shock, she remained
calm due to instructions and assurance from her
guide to stay underwater. "There were two or
three continuous sounds of explosions. If they [had
been closer to us], I think our eardrums would
have been damaged."
Charles Mawan, who runs the Blue Fin dive
shop in Kudat, told the New Straits Times that fish
bombing activities have increased since last year.
He recalled hearing three or four blasts during each
dive. "They drop the fish bomb some four or five
kilometers away from diving areas, but [the shock
wave] makes our hearts jump each time. When we
emerge at the water's surface, the [fish bombers]
would be nowhere in sight."
Mawan said that after dive operators in Kudat
lodged reports to authorities, there was a significant
reduction in fish bombings. Sabah's marine
police said 30 arrests were made between January
and June.
On the other hand, David McGuire, director of
Shark Stewards, a conservation nonprofit that has
operations near Pulau Kalapuan, employs people
from that island where the deaths occurred. He told Undercurrent that Shark Stewards has documented
scores of bombings, petitioned the government to
enforce the law, and is now working with a group
called Stop Fish Bombing (www.stopfishbombing.org). His goal is to help prevent bomb fishing everywhere,
saving marine ecosystems and the livelihoods
of the communities that rely on them.
Now that murder charges have put a spotlight
on fish bombing, Malaysia's Maritime Enforcement
Agency has publicly vowed to work closely with
Sabah officials, sending them more vessels and
helping the police track down the suspects in the
deaths of the three divers. A few days after the
arrests, officials inspected boats near the Turtle
Islands, and the fish market at Sandkatan, looking
for fish caught in the bombing style. Hopefully
they'll continue their efforts.
--Vanessa Richardson