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Gambian fishermen attack foreign boats, locals
Los Angeles Times
|September 12, 2025
The sailors are angered by what they describe as illegal encroachment.

SALIF Ndure and a colleague, right, approach a vessel they said was fishing too close to Gambia's shore.
Kawsu Leigh writhed in pain on the fishing boat, his burned skin as mottled as the paint on the deck beneath him, Raw and slick, the burns covered large parts of his upper body.
His day began as normal, with a shift on one of the foreign-owned vessels that carry out commercial fishing in waters off West Africa. It ended with him so badly injured from an arson attack that he struggles to recover a year later.
Local fishermen, angered by what they call illegal encroachment and sabotage by the foreign vessels off Gambia, had again confronted one of the boats, the Egyptian-owned Abu Islam.
But Leigh was a local sailor too. Video of the attack, exclusively obtained by the Associated Press, documents an emerging problem in the fight for dominance in West African waters. Gambians are now fighting Gambians at sea, driven by market forces — and foreign appetites — beyond their control.
The problem came from attempted reforms. To give locals more say, and pay, in commercial fishing, Gambia's government now requires foreign vessels operating offshore to carry a certain percentage of Gambian crew.
Those locals have become accidental targets of an anger they understand well, after trying to compete with the Chinese-owned and other foreign vessels with little more than small wooden boats and their bare hands.
The video was shared by the Assn. of Gambia Sailors, filmed minutes after the arson attack. The AP reviewed more than 20 such videos from various sources showing confrontations since 2023. Leigh said he is surprised to have survived, and unhappy that Gambians have been made into rivals.
Other clashes in the waters off Gambia have been deadly, with at least 11 local fishermen reportedly killed over the last 15 years.
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