Turkey fishermen fear mines in Black Sea
Published: 05:04 PM,Apr 07,2022 | EDITED : 08:04 PM,Apr 07,2022
A fisherman fixes his net in Rumelifeneri, a seaport at the entrance of the Bosphorus north of Istanbul. - AFP
RUMELIFENERI, Turkey: Turkish fisherman Sahin Afsut fears the worst: hitting a mine and 'disappearing underwater in the blink of an eye'.
Like many fishermen in Rumelifeneri, a village set on the rocks of the Bosphorus in northern Istanbul, Afsut and his team remain in port since the discovery of a drifting mine last month in the Black Sea.
Fears grew after a second mine was found on March 28, which could have come from Ukraine where Russia launched an attack in February.
A third stray mine was found on Wednesday in the Black Sea off Kefken Island in northwestern Turkey.
Turkish authorities fear an accident and believe the mines became unmoored from the Ukrainian coast during storms.
'If you hit (a mine), you're finished,' says Afsut, wearing a grey cap in front of his small trawler from which he usually catches whiting, red mullet and anchovies.
He did not see the first mine two kilometres offshore, first discovered by a local fisherman but several others described the scene.
'It was large, like half a barrel. We watched from above there, the (special Turkish navy) units neutralised it,' says 55-year-old Ahmet Tarlaci who has been a fisherman for 43 years.
'90 PER CENT STOPPED'
The Turkish navy warned five days before the first was found on March 26 of the risk of mines coming from Ukrainian waters.
But 'the mines arrived quickly, even the Turkish armed forces were surprised,' Tarlaci says.
The Russian defence ministry last week said 370 mines were placed by Ukraine to protect its coast but 10 had broken off.
Kyiv dismissed Moscow's version of events, accusing the Russian navy of letting the mines wander to discredit Ukraine.
At Rumelifeneri port, where around 100 boats including small 40-metre trawler boats were waiting on Friday, '90 per cent of people that we know have stopped' going out to sea, says fisherman Sefki Deniz, 42.
Turkish officials have banned fishing at night and with the price of diesel reaching spectacular heights, many fishermen decided to end the fishing season three weeks ahead of time.
'We already have financial losses, there shouldn't be any human losses,' says Deniz, wearing plastic boots and a blue fleece.
The fisherman regrets the little information provided by officials who say they cannot reveal how many mines there are, where they came from or how dangerous they may be.
'For the time being, (the mines) are not a problem, but we won't let our guard down,' Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Friday.
'They speak now of 10 mines and what if the others wander off? The Black Sea is not a large sea, it's like a lake,' says Deniz, despite 24-hour searches by minehunters in the area.
'NEVER FOUND THEIR BODIES'
'Across from us, there is Ukraine, Russia: if the wind blows violently from the north, it's only a question of time' before the mines arrive in Turkey's waters, fears fishing captain Saban Ucar, 32.
The 30-40 metre (98-foot to 131-foot) fishing boats 'have radars, sonars... but the 9-10 metre boats only have binoculars,' he says from a building overlooking the port.
Ucar was not born at the time, but the memory is still vivid in the village of two accidents in the 1980s caused by mines dating back to World War II.
'There was one that exploded at the port in 1983, five people from the village died. And in 1989, it happened at sea while lifting a net, the mine exploded and so did the boat: four people died.
'We never found their bodies,' says Deniz, one of the veterans at the port. - AFP
Like many fishermen in Rumelifeneri, a village set on the rocks of the Bosphorus in northern Istanbul, Afsut and his team remain in port since the discovery of a drifting mine last month in the Black Sea.
Fears grew after a second mine was found on March 28, which could have come from Ukraine where Russia launched an attack in February.
A third stray mine was found on Wednesday in the Black Sea off Kefken Island in northwestern Turkey.
Turkish authorities fear an accident and believe the mines became unmoored from the Ukrainian coast during storms.
'If you hit (a mine), you're finished,' says Afsut, wearing a grey cap in front of his small trawler from which he usually catches whiting, red mullet and anchovies.
He did not see the first mine two kilometres offshore, first discovered by a local fisherman but several others described the scene.
'It was large, like half a barrel. We watched from above there, the (special Turkish navy) units neutralised it,' says 55-year-old Ahmet Tarlaci who has been a fisherman for 43 years.
'90 PER CENT STOPPED'
The Turkish navy warned five days before the first was found on March 26 of the risk of mines coming from Ukrainian waters.
But 'the mines arrived quickly, even the Turkish armed forces were surprised,' Tarlaci says.
The Russian defence ministry last week said 370 mines were placed by Ukraine to protect its coast but 10 had broken off.
Kyiv dismissed Moscow's version of events, accusing the Russian navy of letting the mines wander to discredit Ukraine.
At Rumelifeneri port, where around 100 boats including small 40-metre trawler boats were waiting on Friday, '90 per cent of people that we know have stopped' going out to sea, says fisherman Sefki Deniz, 42.
Turkish officials have banned fishing at night and with the price of diesel reaching spectacular heights, many fishermen decided to end the fishing season three weeks ahead of time.
'We already have financial losses, there shouldn't be any human losses,' says Deniz, wearing plastic boots and a blue fleece.
The fisherman regrets the little information provided by officials who say they cannot reveal how many mines there are, where they came from or how dangerous they may be.
'For the time being, (the mines) are not a problem, but we won't let our guard down,' Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Friday.
'They speak now of 10 mines and what if the others wander off? The Black Sea is not a large sea, it's like a lake,' says Deniz, despite 24-hour searches by minehunters in the area.
'NEVER FOUND THEIR BODIES'
'Across from us, there is Ukraine, Russia: if the wind blows violently from the north, it's only a question of time' before the mines arrive in Turkey's waters, fears fishing captain Saban Ucar, 32.
The 30-40 metre (98-foot to 131-foot) fishing boats 'have radars, sonars... but the 9-10 metre boats only have binoculars,' he says from a building overlooking the port.
Ucar was not born at the time, but the memory is still vivid in the village of two accidents in the 1980s caused by mines dating back to World War II.
'There was one that exploded at the port in 1983, five people from the village died. And in 1989, it happened at sea while lifting a net, the mine exploded and so did the boat: four people died.
'We never found their bodies,' says Deniz, one of the veterans at the port. - AFP