Adrift: Senegal’s coastal crisis and the deadly route to Europe – an EJF documentary
Abdou and his father are separated by 1,500 km of ocean – a distance Abdou travelled in November 2020. He left Joal-Fadiouth, a fishing town in Senegal, and eventually reached Tenerife, a Spanish island off the coast of Morocco, after spending approximately fourteen days at sea in a wooden fishing boat. This route, increasingly used by people in West Africa to reach Europe, is considered one of the most deadly on Earth. In 2023, an estimated 3,000 people departing from Senegal alone lost their lives attempting the same perilous journey. Fishing runs deep in Abdou’s family. His father, uncle, siblings, cousins, and extended relatives have all worked in Senegal’s artisanal fishing sector – a livelihood now under severe threat. Continued poor fisheries management and the expansion of a largely foreign-owned bottom-trawl fleet have depleted fish populations, jeopardising the economic and social fabric of coastal communities like Joal. For Abdou, his loved ones, and thousands of others along Senegal’s coastline, the fishing they once depended on is no longer an option. With few alternatives, more and more people are being pushed toward life-threatening journeys, seeking opportunities elsewhere. This escalating, intersecting crisis demands urgent attention and action. China, the EU and other foreign states must take responsibility and work alongside the Senegalese government to ensure sustainable, ethical and legal fisheries before more lives and more livelihoods are lost. “Adrift” builds on The Environmental Justice Foundation's (EJF) extensive work in Senegal. Our new report, “The Deadly Route to Europe” further reveals the impacts of overfishing and illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing in Senegal and how fisheries declines in the country are driving irregular migration to Europe. The Environmental Justice Foundation (EJF) is an international NGO working to defend our shared natural environment and human rights: https://ejfoundation.org Subscribe to the Environmental Justice Foundation (EJF): / @environmentaljusticefoundation Find us on Twitter: / ejfoundation Facebook: / ejfoundation Instagram: / ejfoundation

Mozambique's Coastal Crisis: Illegal fishing by China's fleet – an EJF film

Dark Waters: Africa's deadliest migration route - BBC Africa Eye Documentary

Walking into Senegal's Biggest Ghetto (West Africa)

Before You Board: The Hidden Risks of Distant Water Fishing

Walls of Death: Illegal Driftnetting in the Mediterranean | EJF Documentary

The Red and The Grey Matter: New Architecture in Africa

The Rothschild Who Financed The Boer War. And Walked Away With South Africa's Gold

Net loss: the urgent need for reform in Cameroon's fisheries – an EJF film

Deceived, Abused, Forgotten: The Untold Story of Filipino Migrant Workers Exploited at Sea

Senegal: Climate Emergency Threatens Millions of Lives | Environment Documentary

Unregulated: The South Atlantic Squid Fishing Boom – an EJF film

Criminal catches: How to stop the supply of illegal seafood to the UK – an EJF film

The Forests of Life: How Mangroves Sustain Ghana's Fisheries, Coastline, and Climate – an EJF film

Bulgaria's Super Teacher | ARTE.tv Documentary

The Guianas: South America's Weirdest Countries?

Senegal is not what I expected

Why the Mongols Vanished After Conquering Everything

Radio Dadaab | EJF Documentary

How Traore is Magically Growing Real Apples in Desert?

