The African fishermen who blame Chinese trawlers for their woes
- Image caption, Fishermen on Sierra Leone's Sherbo Island say their catches have fallenByEd ButlerBusiness reporterReporting fromSherbo Island, Sierra LeoneThe villagers are shouting as they haul on the ropes to pull the net in from the sea.
- It takes a big collective effort of a dozen or more people to drag the wriggling mass of snapper, mackerel, barracuda, rays, and many more fish besides, onto the beach.
- Shore fishing like this is a tradition on Sierra Leone's Sherbo Island in West Africa, some 75 miles (120km) south of the capital Freetown.
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- Image caption, Fishermen on Sierra Leone's Sherbo Island say their catches have fallenByEd ButlerBusiness reporterReporting fromSherbo Island, Sierra LeoneThe villagers are shouting as they haul on the ropes to pull the net in from the sea.
- It takes a big collective effort of a dozen or more people to drag the wriggling mass of snapper, mackerel, barracuda, rays, and many more fish besides, onto the beach.
- Shore fishing like this is a tradition on Sierra Leone's Sherbo Island in West Africa, some 75 miles (120km) south of the capital Freetown.
Sources: BBC News