Bryde's whale "Balaenoptera" brydei, front center
Cape long-beaked common dolphin Delphinus "delphis" capensis, back far right
With salema porgy Sarpa salpa, around whale
Observed by cleeve-searescue, CC BY-NC

seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Israel
seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Ireland

seen from Sweden
seen from Brazil
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Ukraine

seen from Israel

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Israel

seen from Kazakhstan
Bryde's whale "Balaenoptera" brydei, front center
Cape long-beaked common dolphin Delphinus "delphis" capensis, back far right
With salema porgy Sarpa salpa, around whale
Observed by cleeve-searescue, CC BY-NC
Libode, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
Xhosa ox sitting on the shore, Hluleka, Eastern Cape, South Africa, 2019 - by Daniel Naudé (1984), South African
St John's Apostolic Faith Mission. iCala, Eastern Cape. 2021.
Photographed on film.
#HappyWomensMonth
Activist Nonhle Mbuthuma founded a local organization along South Africa’s Wild Coast to fight a proposed strip mine 17 years ago. Despite o
Excerpt from this story from Yale Environment 360:
For nearly a decade, Nonhle Mbuthuma has traveled with a bodyguard. The founder of the Amadiba Crisis Committee — a local group formed to fight a proposed titanium mine along South Africa’s Wild Coast — Mbuthuma has long had the support of many in rural Pondoland’s Xolobeni community. But opponents have demonized her as an arch enemy of all economic development, and some have been encouraged to believe that if Mbuthuma “disappeared,” they would get rich.
Eight years ago, Mbuthuma’s activist colleague Sikhosiphi “Bazooka” Rhadebe, who opposed the mine, was shot dead outside his home by two men dressed as police officers. (Neither assailant has been caught.) Mbuthuma was also a target that day. Amadiba succeeded in halting construction of the mine, and Mbuthuma, 46, has continued working to protect this highly biodiverse region and the traditional culture of the Mpondo people.
This week, Mbuthuma, and her colleague Sinegugu Zukulu, won a Goldman Environmental Prize for their recent efforts to prevent Shell Oil from prospecting along the Wild Coast. As the activist headed to San Francisco to pick up her award, she spoke via Zoom with Yale Environment 360 about Pondoland, plans for its future development, and continuing threats to her life.
Yale Environment 360: Tell me about your struggle with Shell Oil.
Nonhle Mbuthuma: When we heard in late 2021 that Shell wanted to do seismic blasting off the coast, it was like someone put a bomb to our chest. These waters are precious, with rich ocean currents and reefs feeding whale calving grounds and fisheries. That water is part of us. We have cooperatives that do environmental fishing, using rods rather than nets that wipe out everything. But the ocean is also a sacred place. According to our traditions, our ancestors reside in the ocean. We have a right under our country’s constitution to practice our culture, and that requires protecting our waters. So we decided to fight in the courts.
The government had already given Shell permission to start seismic blasting. Shell is a big company with a lot of money, but we said that they are not bigger than our livelihoods and culture. We mobilized our communities to collect information to explain why the ocean is so important to us. We were backed by protests all over the country.
Even as the surveying began, the high court ruled in our favor. The judges said the permit to do the surveys had been granted unlawfully because the government had not considered the impact on our livelihoods and culture and because Shell did not consult the community, which is a requirement of our constitution. But Shell and the government have decided to appeal the judgment.
One of the most beautiful experiences ever, braaing prawns on an open fire.
My roots