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INDONESIA, Waigeo Island, Raja Ampat, Papua – June 2007
Solar power and radio for Araway Village; solar power for Beo Village; paved footpaths for Go Village, Kabilol Village, Kalitoko Village, Lopintol Village, Waifoy Village and Warimak Village; and public toilet and bathing facilities for Warsamdin Village in support of a 123,553-acre marine protected area

Shore of Mayalibit Bay View of the bay from Beo Village Go Village New path in Kabilol Village New board walk in Kalitoko Village

Lopintol Village Muddy path in Lopintol Village New dock in Waifoy Village View of the bay from Waifoy Village New path in Waifoy Village

New path in Warimak Village Warsamdin Village New public utility building in Warsamdin Village New public utility building in Warsamdin Village Dancers in Warsamdin Village
Click photo to enlarge

Mayalibit is a large bay that deeply notches the island of Waigeo in Raja Ampat. This nutrient-rich, mangrove-fringed bay has long been known as a feeding, breeding and nursery ground for fishes and home to a school of unidentified species of white dolphin.  The area is also an important cultural and spiritual area for the indigenous Mayan people of Raja Ampat.  Recently the nine villages of Mayalibit declared their 123,553-acre bay a marine protected area where commercial fishing, netting, shark finning and any means of destructive fishing is banned.  Six of the villages (Go, Kabilol, Kalitoko, Lopintol, Waifoy and Warimak) have requested a critically-needed paved footpath to allow the villagers easy access to fresh water wells and their school. The tiny village of Araway is in need of solar power sufficient enough to run a light bulb in the village meeting place, as well as a radio so that they can receive news of local issues. The village of Beo has also requested solar power. The largest village, Warsamdin, currently has no sanitary means of waste disposal. Twenty eco-friendly public washrooms are needed as an alternative to dumping sewage straight into the bay.  With the assistance of Conservation International Indonesia, Seacology will support these nine projects in support of the communities’ commitment to a 123,553-acre marine restricted area for a minimum of 10 years.* (Araway Village project funded by Seacology Germany. German flag)

UPDATE October 2007 - Village agreements and list of documentation needed to start the project were completed in early September. Plans for September through October include purchasing and shipping materials, constructing the footpath and public facilities at Waifoy and Wasmardin, the public facilities at Beo and Kabilol, and installing the solar power system at Araway. Later work will complete the footpaths at Lopintol, Go, Warimak and Kalitoko Villages.

UPDATE December 2007 - As of November, washrooms were 85% complete and paths at four villages were in various stages of completion ranging from 30% complete to 100% complete. Solar lights at Araway were originally expected to only be available for installation at a public community area but the project leaders were able to purchase 12 lamps to distribute to all 12 houses in the village. 2008 work will complete the footpaths at Lopintol and Go Villages and solar power at Beo Village.

UPDATE May 2008 - A Seacology delegation visited the site in September 2007. Between September 2007 and May 2008 the nine villages were in the process of developing village decrees for acceptable and sustainable fishing practices, and a list of prohibited practices within Mayalibit Bay. There is an active village patrol team in place guarding against prohibited activities. The solar units at Araway, the footpaths at Kabilol and Waifoy, and the eco-friendly washrooms at Warsamdin are all 100% installed and complete. The footpath at Warimak is about 85% completed, and the footpath at Kalitoko is about 20% completed. Plans for the rest of 2008 include completing the Warimak and Kalitoko projects, and beginning the remaining projects at Beo, Go and Lopintol.

UPDATE January 2009 - As of November 2008 the footpaths at Warimak and Kalitoko were being completed, and materials were purchased to begin the remaining projects at Beo, Go and Lopintol.

UPDATE December 2009 - As of December 2009 field representative Arnaz Mehta reports that the projects were completed in all nine villages with the majority of those villages experiencing no problems (Kalitoko, Go, Lopintol, Araway and Waifoy). Unfortunately, the public washrooms in Warsamdin and the footpath in Kabilol have been leveled due to a Raja Ampat regency government plan to construct a “ring road” around Mayalibit Bay. This plan was not anticipated by the local villages and there was nothing they could do to stop it. No update regarding Warimak was received and staff will continue to follow-up on this village. The overall conservation progress in Mayalibit Bay has been outstanding over the past two years. All nine villages around the bay have formed conservation youth groups (370 people in total) that conduct informal patrols of their village reefs, beach clean-ups, and other conservation activities. There is also a formal community patrol system which does regular patrols around the entire 53,000ha MPA. Since the creation of these patrols several large net fishing operations as well as one massive mangrove crab trapping operation were ousted from the Bay. Additionally the communities have settled upon a zonation system for the MPA which includes approx 20% as "no take area" of the healthiest reef and mangrove areas in the Bay. This zonation will be formalized as law as early as June 2010. In addition to implementing two new fisheries policies in the Bay, each of the nine villages have implemented sasi (traditional law temporal closures) for mangrove crabs and sea cucumbers to conserve this traditional resource by closing the fishing season for these animals for a period of 6 to 12 months and then re-opening it for a short period of about 2 weeks before closing it again. Villagers support for MPA and sustainable fishing is very strong and wide-spread, and the Seacology projects overall have had an important part in building this support.

UPDATE January 2010 - As of January 2010 Arnaz reports that the footpath in Warimak is 100% complete; about 300 meters of concrete foot path has been laid down to span all the homes of the village.

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*Support for asterisked projects is provided fully or in part by: Nu Skin Force For Good Foundation

German flag Indicates full or partial funding by Seacology Germany

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