(SOURCE: Matthew Bonanno, https://timesofmalta.com/article/st-paul-bay-residents-protest-fish-farm-slime.1115139)
St Paul’s Bay residents gathered outside Azzopardi Fisheries on Sunday to protest against the ongoing pollution of the town’s shore with fish farm slime.
Last week, Azzopardi Fisheries was forced to admit that the slime was coming from one of its fish farms, after Times of Malta filmed workers at a tuna farm off the coast of St Paul’s Bay using nets and buckets to try to contain the slime before it drifted towards swimming areas along the coast. The Federation of Aquaculture Producers subsequently apologised.
Over the past few days, slime was also been spotted off the coast of Sliema, although in that instance, fish farm operators blamed storm run-off.
Sandra Gauci, St Paul’s Bay councillor and chairperson of ADPD, which organised the protest, said she had seen people cleaning slime from the sea near Gillieru restaurant that same morning.
“The fish farms need to spend more money on cleaning, otherwise they should shut down if they aren’t capable of removing their own filth that we then have to put up with,” she said.
“Is this how you treat people? You take and take, and give nothing back to the environment. We are tired of getting slime on our skin and hair that can’t be removed easily.”
Gauci slammed the Fisheries Ministry for its silence and inaction.
“Politicians only come when there’s a photo opportunity. Now watch them come before an election and pretend that they think of us.”
Gauci thanked Archbishop Charles Scicluna, who last week shared photos and videos of slime in St Paul’s Bay, while calling out “another sad instance in our country of the many paying for the enrichment of the few.”
Matthew Maggi, whose family lives in St Paul’s Bay, said politicians were enjoying their swimming pools and yachts, while locals could only look at the sea.
“Our representatives in parliament are constantly putting the interests of big business, as well as their own, ahead of everyone else’s, Maggi said, adding that the fish farms should never have been put there in the first place.
“They have been given too much power, which they are now using against us. The sea was our last respite from all the noise, pollution and overpopulation that we never asked for, but now they’ve taken that away from us too.” he said.







