A 'sea war' brews off Gambia as desperate local fishermen attack foreign
vessels, and each other
[August 29, 2025] By
GRACE EKPU
BANJUL, Gambia (AP) — 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 Association 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 past 15 years.
“It’s like most of them, when they are going for fishing, it’s as if
they’re going for war,” said Abdou Sanyang, secretary general of the
Association of Gambia Sailors.
The fighting threatens to tear fishing communities apart, while
overfishing to supply seafood buyers around the world undermines
livelihoods for everyone. There are concerns that the fish population
off Gambia could collapse in the coming years. That would be a business
and environmental disaster in a small country with two main economic
drivers: tourism and seafood.
For generations, Gambia’s fishermen have known no other work. Now, the
financial pressures of competing with foreign-owned vessels are leading
some to give up. They are tempted to sell their boats for use in another
growing industry: migration toward Europe through the risky Atlantic
waters.
Some of the fishermen become migrants themselves, hoping for another
kind of good fortune at sea. Leigh, unable to support his family, is
considering that now.
Two men against 20
Famara and Salif Ndure are brothers in the fishing community of Gunjur.
They say they have lost more than half of their fishing nets to foreign
trawlers that pull at the nets and damage them.
“You see them cutting your net, but you cannot do anything, because two
men cannot go against 20 to 30 men in the sea,” Famara said. The
brothers said they oppose attacking vessels with their countrymen
aboard.

They said the foreign vessels have become increasingly aggressive during
the current government of President Adama Barrow, who took over after
the ouster of former dictator Yahya Jammeh in 2017. Gambia reopened its
waters to foreign-owned vessels that year.
Famara said fishing nets are often cut at night, when the foreign
vessels go beyond authorized zones to fish. Local fishermen have
exclusive fishing rights within 9 nautical miles from shore, but they
claim the trawlers come as close as 5. That has made clashes at sea
inevitable.
“Anywhere they want, they come and feast. That’s why we’re suffering,”
Famara said.
He and his brother once had 15 nets. Those have been reduced to three. A
single net line can cost $100, making replacement almost impossible in a
country where the per capita income is under $1,000.
Compensation from the government for the loss of a net requires the
reporting of a violation by an observer with the fisheries ministry who
is stationed on a foreign vessel — another attempted reform.
The brothers feel helpless. The trawlers are “destroying the nation,”
they said, asserting that incidents are reported but nothing gets done.
They think the money the government makes from the licensing of foreign
trawlers is the reason. Licensing fees vary, with some vessels paying
the equivalent of $275 per ton.
“They tell us that what the trawlers pay, we small boats don’t pay it,”
Famara said.
Gambia's government did not respond to questions from the AP.
Most of the foreign trawlers operate without proper documentation and
with unauthorized gear, asserted Lamin Jassey, president of the Gunjur
Conservationists and Ecotourism Association. The local group works on
marine conservation and advocates for better fisheries policy.

The violations are so blatant that the foreign vessels hardly hide their
presence when they violate local waters at night, said Omar Gaye with a
local cooperative of nongovernmental fisheries groups.
“You even think that here is a town because of the lights,” he said.
One of the brothers, Salif, even went to sea last year with a Gambian
naval officer to report a foreign trawler after a confrontation over its
alleged encroachment. No action was taken.
He ended up filming what happened at sea and posted it online, hoping
for an official response someday.
Violations and little punishment
One significant case has reached court in Gambia over fishing conflicts,
and another is being prepared. One is the arson attack involving Leigh’s
vessel. The other is a collision last year between a foreign trawler,
identified by local fishermen as the Majilac 6, and a local vessel that
killed three local fishermen.
They are rare cases in a country where the pursuit of justice takes time
and cash that many people don’t have.
Gaye expressed his frustration with the Majilac 6, which he claimed was
fishing too close to shore, and with Gambian authorities, who he said
are not adequately investigating the deaths.
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In this image from video provided by fisherman Salif Ndure, he and a
colleague, right, approach an industrial fishing vessel which they
said was fishing within the 9 nautical mile radius of artisanal
fishing boats off the coast of Gambia, on Dec. 3, 2024. (Salif Ndure
via AP)
 “We don’t know why till now this
thing is pending. No one is talking about it. And this is a criminal
case, this is a crime against the state!” he said of the case.
Authorities haven’t visited the families of the dead or offered
restitution, he said.
Omar Abdullah Jagne, the managing director of the Majilac Group of
vessels — whose owners come from various countries — did not respond
to AP questions. The owner of the Majilac 6 was not clear.
Maget Mbye and his wife, Fatou Jobe, lost their 22-year-old son in
the collision.
“This is very painful, and nothing can pay us for his soul," Mbye
said. “They are continuing to work as if nothing happened … We want
the government to help.”
The government has been trying to patrol the seas.
In March last year, before the deadly collision, armed maritime
interdiction units with Gambia’s navy detained eight foreign
trawlers for offenses including fishing in protected waters, fishing
without a valid license, misreporting catches and using undersized
mesh, which collects fish smaller than allowed. Almost all were
accused of fishing inside the area reserved for local fishermen.
It was a rare deployment. Gambia’s poorly resourced navy has relied
on international support from nonprofit organizations to watch its
waters.
The Majilac 6 was among the vessels detained.
The vessels soon returned to sea, and locals say they continued to
fish in Gambian waters.
Gaye and others were angered to learn that the Majilac 6 was blamed
in the deadly collision. He said such collisions have killed at
least 11 local fishermen over the past decade and a half.

He also noted a double standard in enforcement, saying the case of
last year's arson attack on the Egyptian-owned vessel was quickly
resolved. “When it is the artisanal fishermen, there is no justice.
But when this is industrial fishing vessels, immediate effect, there
will be justice," he said.
Fines for offenses are not fixed and can be negotiated. Repeat
offenders face little punishment. Jassey said many Gambian fishermen
believe the trawlers are often tipped off in advance of maritime
interdiction unit deployments.
Because Gambia is so small, foreign vessels often dock in
neighboring Senegal instead of in Gambia’s capital, meaning fewer
chances for local authorities to confront them at all.
But last month, Gambia's military said the navy had detained three
vessels for violations including fishing without authorization and
the use of illegal fishing gear. One was another vessel with the
Majilac Group.
Outside observers of Gambia’s fishing industry are few to none, and
data collection is sparse. Sea Shepherd, a nonprofit conservation
group, has an agreement with Gambia to jointly patrol the country’s
waters but did not visit last year as part of its mission to combat
illegal fishing off West Africa.
The Association of Gambia Sailors now encourages fishermen to
capture alleged violations by foreign vessels, and violent
confrontations, on video. Film, don’t fight, it says.
The same association also provides the foreign trawlers with the
government-required local crew members. In the past two years,
Gambia’s government has increased the quota from 20% to at least 30%
— meaning more potential for Gambians fighting Gambians.
Those fishermen receive no training on what to expect, or on how to
protect themselves from what the head of the association, Sanyang,
called a “sea war."

Eating fish becomes too expensive
The conflict at sea off Gambia is occurring as fish stocks decline.
Fish including grouper, cuttlefish, sardinella and bonga are
over-exploited, according to an Amnesty International report in May
2023 on the human cost of overfishing there.
The sailors association believes that the foreign vessels eventually
will move into the waters of nearby countries like Sierra Leone and
Guinea Bissau, seeking more fish and less local opposition.
Declining fish stocks have affected food security in Gambia. Prices
have risen, putting fish out of reach even for many people who pull
them from the sea.
Instead, the majority of Gambians "depend on chicken that is
imported from the world, which is very sad,” Jassey said.
He called the situation for local fishermen “very fragile.”
Competition with foreign trawlers has left many unable to afford the
work.
Human traffickers are buying their boats.
“These agents have a lot of money. They can buy the fishing boat,
like three to four hundred, five hundred thousand dalasi, you know,
from the fisherman who is sitting for like six to seven months
without fishing,” Jassey said. “So that is very, very serious. That
is why we’re losing a lot of our young people.”
The 24-year-old Leigh, still recovering from last year’s arson
attack, has spent the money he received from the foreign trawler as
compensation -- 51,000 dalasi – along with three months of his
17,000-dalasi salary. He spent it all on medication.
Now he considers giving up fishing and taking his chances on
migrating to Europe.
“I just want to work for me and my family to survive,” he said.
___
Associated Press writer Mustapha Manneh in Banjul, Gambia,
contributed.
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