Life after cod: Latvia reinvents its coastal communities

Life after cod: Latvia reinvents its coastal communities
Entrance of the Dieninas fish farm in the village of Berzciems, Latvia. (AFP)
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Life after cod: Latvia reinvents its coastal communities

Life after cod: Latvia reinvents its coastal communities
  • With the European Union steadily cutting allowable catches of Baltic cod, and moving toward a total ban to replenish stocks, towns and villages are diversifying into tourism and seafood processing

VENTSPILS: Fishers do not usually wish for a “perfect storm.” But Latvian boating communities are hoping for exactly that: a rare tempest that might, one day, revive waning stocks of Baltic cod.
Decreasing salinity in the Baltic Sea is robbing the saltwater fish of the conditions it needs to thrive.
And as its population shrinks, so do the fishing traditions that have long characterised villages along Latvia’s 494-kilometer (307-mile) coastline.
The result for the communities in this small EU nation is a drive to reinvent themselves, to survive.
With the European Union steadily cutting allowable catches of Baltic cod, and moving toward a total ban to replenish stocks, towns and villages are diversifying into tourism and seafood processing.
“We launched a new marina for yachting, offered services for sea travelers, and a French investor opened a brand new shipyard for yacht building,” Agris Stulbergs, harbormaster for the port in the village of Engure, explained to AFP.
Leisure boating has become a favored activity in this village, located just 50 kilometers from the capital Riga, and others.
Farther west, in the port city of Ventspils, Juris Petersons, a lifelong seaman, reminisced how Latvian fishers used to bring in lavish hauls of fish highly valued in kitchens from Russia to Britain.
“Back in the mid-80s the Latvian fishing fleet brought in 55,000 tons of Baltic cod, in addition to salmon, herring and many other saltwater fish,” he said.
Now “the environmental conditions have become so unfavorable to cod growth that Latvian fishermen are allowed to catch just 16 tons of cod a year,” he said.
“And even that amounts only to the accidental by-catch when we fish for herring,” said Petersons, an industrial fishing boat skipper until he sold off his trawlers last year.
The Baltic Sea is fed by a number of large freshwater rivers. It is connected with the North Sea only through the shallow Danish straits, preventing Atlantic saltwater from entering the Baltic basin.

In order to recover, the cod population would need a rare seastorm, with just the right windspeed at the correct angle to push masses of saltwater into the Baltic Sea.
That “happened at least twice during the previous century, but currently we’re waiting for that perfect storm for the third decade,” Petersons said.
Given the smaller yield, many in the industry have focused on quality over quantity.
“All the fish canning companies... have either gone out of business or turned their production lines into making more valuable export-grade products,” said Janis Megnis, chief of the Roja port administration.
Their high quality herring and anchovy products “can be found today from Walmart in the United States to stores in Australia and Japan,” he said.
Political changes have also affected the industry.
Historically Latvia’s fish processing industry mainly served markets in Russia and Belarus.
But with the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014, followed by Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, and the resulting Western sanctions, Latvian fishing companies have been forced to seek other markets.
The biggest importers today are Canada, Ukraine, Poland, Romania, Denmark and the UK, according to the agriculture ministry.
New markets include Arab countries and South Africa.

Many families in Latvia’s coastal towns have also turned their former fisheries into guesthouses and vacation destinations or switched from selling raw fish to the more lucrative smoked, prepared and spiced varieties.
“My husband is a fifth-generation fisherman: he goes out to sea for fish, which we then smoke and turn into high-end products,” said Iveta Celkarte, who runs a fishing estate in Berzciems village.
“We also have a family cafe... serving our own seafood,” said Celkarte, who has also become a television and social media personality.
Celkarte offers three-hour tours about the history of traditional fishing, taking visitors on a stroll through dunes to the shore and finishing with a special meal.
“For me it is important to tell people about the traditions of our coast, the history of fishing and the life of previous generations working on the sea” she said.
Aivars Lembergs, a former mayor of Ventspils, said he began turning his city into a manufacturing hub and developing tourism has been key, and is paying off.
The city is seeing many tourists coming in from neighboring Lithuania.
“During summers you’ll sometimes see more Lithuanians on the streets of Ventspils than Latvians, as Lithuania has a very short Baltic coastline, and their tourists come here to enjoy the short Baltic summer,” said Lembergs, who was mayor between 1988 and 2021.


UK museum finds 4,000-year-old handprint on Egypt tomb

UK museum finds 4,000-year-old handprint on Egypt tomb
Updated 29 July 2025

UK museum finds 4,000-year-old handprint on Egypt tomb

UK museum finds 4,000-year-old handprint on Egypt tomb

LONDON: British researchers have discovered a rare handprint on a 4,000-year-old Egyptian artifact, a Cambridge museum said.
The ancient handprint was found by museum conservators on the base of an Egyptian soul house — a clay offering tray in the shape of a building which may have been used in tombs for laying out food offerings or as a dwelling for souls.
The unique discovery was made after the piece, crafted between 2055-1650 BC, was examined by conservation staff in preparation for a new exhibition.
“I have never seen such a complete handprint on an Egyptian object before,” said Helen Strudwick, senior curator and Egyptologist at the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge.
The handprint was left by the maker of the soul house, when they picked it up before drying and firing the clay.
“When you see something like this, you feel very close to the person who left their mark on an object,” Strudwick said, describing the finding to AFP as an “exciting moment.”
“You can see all the fingers, and also where the heel of the hand rested,” she said.
The rare artifact will be on display at the museum’s Made in Ancient Egypt exhibition which opens on October 3.
The exhibition will focus on the makers of Egyptian artifacts such as jewelry, ceramics and sculptures.
It is important to understand how the ancient objects were made “in order to look after them properly,” the curator said.
The museum in southeast England has been researching how the artifacts were created since 2014, but little is known about the potters that worked in Ancient Egypt.
Since pottery was seen as having a low value, Egyptian potters may have been accorded a lower social status than other craftspeople.
“We can’t really say anything about the identity of the person from the handprint. It is quite small — about the same size as my own hand,” said Strudwick.
“If this is a man’s handprint, it’s possible that — given the scale of it — he was a younger person, or it may be that a more junior person in the workshop was responsible for moving these objects out to dry,” she speculated.
Strudwick says the history of Egyptian craftspeople was often overlooked by researchers.
But with new research methods, “we are able to know more and more about how they worked, lived and how they wanted to be remembered for all time,” she said.
The exhibition will include a large loan of antiquities from the Louvre museum in France, the most significant of its kind to visit the UK in almost 20 years.

 


Labubu fans dote over ugly-cute doll trending at Comic-Con

Labubu fans dote over ugly-cute doll trending at Comic-Con
Updated 28 July 2025

Labubu fans dote over ugly-cute doll trending at Comic-Con

Labubu fans dote over ugly-cute doll trending at Comic-Con
  • Labubu dolls have been popularized by celebrities, including Lisa from Blackpink
  • The dolls were created by a Hong Kong artist and is based on Nordic mythology

SAN DIEGO: San Diego Comic-Con is the latest location where the ugly-cute dolls named Labubu have been trending, with fans carrying the plushies globally popularized by celebrities Rihanna, Lizzo, Dua Lipa, and Lisa from the K-pop group Blackpink. The wide-eyed and grinning doll was created in 2015 by Hong Kong artist and illustrator Kasing Lung. In 2019, Lung allowed them to be sold by Pop Mart, a Chinese toy company that sells collectible figurines, often in “blind boxes.”
“Blind boxes” are sealed boxes containing a surprise item that is usually part of a themed collection.
Naomi Galban, from San Diego, waited in line on Sunday at the Pop Mart booth in the San Diego Convention Center for a chance to get her first Labubu.
“Every time I go to a Pop Mart store, they’re sold out,” the 24-year-old told Reuters. She hoped to buy one for her little sister.
Emily Brough, Pop Mart’s Head of IP Licensing, spoke to Reuters on Thursday about Labubu fans at Comic-Con.
“We love to see how fans are personalizing it (Labubu) for themselves,” Brough said next to the Pop Mart booth.
While Brough noted that there were many people with a Labubu strapped to their bags and backpacks at Comic-Con, the doll’s popularity did not happen overnight. Labubus had a huge boost in 2019 after Pop Mart began selling them, and in 2024, when Blackpink’s Lisa, who is Thai, created a buying frenzy in Thailand after she promoted Labubu on social media.
Pop Mart saw sales skyrocket in North America that same year, with revenue in the US in the first quarter of 2025 already surpassing the full-year US revenue from 2024, Pop Mart said.
When he created Labubu, Lung gave the character, who is female, a backstory inspired by Nordic mythology.
He called her and his other fictional creatures “The Monsters.”
Diana Goycortua, 25, first discovered Labubu through social media, and before she knew it, it felt like a “game” to try and collect the dolls.
“It’s a little bit of gambling with what you’re getting,” the Labubu fan from San Diego said on Sunday while waiting at the Pop Mart booth, concluding that her love for the character made it worth trying blind boxes.
Goycortua already has three Labubus, and was hoping to score her a fourth one at Comic-Con.


China’s birthplace of kung fu rocked by embezzlement probe

China’s birthplace of kung fu rocked by embezzlement probe
Updated 28 July 2025

China’s birthplace of kung fu rocked by embezzlement probe

China’s birthplace of kung fu rocked by embezzlement probe
  • Abbot Shi Yongxin is suspected of “embezzling project funds and temple assets,” the Shaolin Temple said in a statement on WeChat
  • Known as the “CEO monk” for establishing companies abroad, Shi is also alleged to be engaging in “improper relationships” with multiple women

BEIJING: Chinese authorities are investigating the head of the temple where kung fu was born over alleged embezzlement and other misconduct, the monastery said.
Abbot Shi Yongxin, known as the “CEO monk” for establishing dozens of companies abroad, is suspected of “embezzling project funds and temple assets,” the Shaolin Temple said in a statement on WeChat Sunday.
It said Shi had “seriously violated Buddhist precepts,” including by allegedly engaging in “improper relationships” with multiple women.
“Multiple departments” were conducting a joint investigation, the temple said.

In this July 3, 2006 photo, Shi Yongxin, abbot of Shaolin Temple speaks at the Shaolin Temple in Dengfeng in central China's Henan province. (Chinatopix via AP, file) 

Shi has previously been accused by former monks of embezzling money from a temple-run company, maintaining a fleet of luxury cars and fathering children with multiple women.
China’s government exercises authority over the appointment of religious leaders, and “improper” conduct is often grounds for removal from office.
A hashtag related to the temple scandal had been viewed over 560 million times on social media platform Weibo, as of Monday morning.
The last post to the abbot’s personal account on Weibo declared: “when one’s own nature is pure, the pure land is here in the present.”
Shi faced similar allegations in 2015 which the temple called “vicious libel.”
Shi, 59, took office as abbot in 1999 and in the following decades expanded Shaolin studies and cultural knowledge overseas.
He helped the temple establish dozens of companies — but received backlash for commercialising Buddhism.
The temple, established in AD 495, is known as the birthplace of Zen Buddhism and Chinese kung fu.
Shi was first elected vice-chairman of the Buddhist Association of China in 2002 and has served as a representative to the National People’s Congress, the country’s top lawmaking body.
 


Indian police arrest man running ‘fake embassy’

Indian police arrest man running ‘fake embassy’
Updated 26 July 2025

Indian police arrest man running ‘fake embassy’

Indian police arrest man running ‘fake embassy’
  • According to police, the man claimed to be the ambassador of fictional nations “like West Arctica, Saborga, Poulvia, Lodonia”
  • He allegedly used vehicles with fake diplomatic plates and shared doctored photos of himself with Indian leaders to bolster his claims

NEW DELHI: Police in India have arrested a man accused of running a fake embassy from a rented house near New Delhi and duping job seekers out of money with promises of overseas employment.
Harsh Vardhan Jain, 47, was operating an “illegal West Arctic embassy by renting a house” in Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh, which neigbhours the capital, local police said.
Jain, according to police, claimed to be the ambassador of fictional nations “like West Arctica, Saborga, Poulvia, Lodonia.”
He allegedly used vehicles with fake diplomatic plates and shared doctored photos of himself with Indian leaders to bolster his claims.
“His main activities involved acting as a broker to secure work in foreign countries for companies and private individuals, as well as operating a hawala (money transfer) racket through shell companies,” the police said in a statement following his arrest earlier this week.
He is also accused of money laundering.
During a raid on Jain’s property, police said they recovered $53,500 in cash in addition to doctored passports and forged documents bearing stamps of India’s foreign ministry.
AFP was unable to reach Jain or his representatives for comment.
Westarctica, cited by the police as one of the countries Jain claimed to be representing, is a US-registered nonprofit “dedicated to studying and preserving this vast, magnificent, desolate region” of Western Antarctica.
In a statement, it said it had appointed Jain as its “Honorary Consul to India” after he had made a “generous donation.”
“He was never granted the position or authority of ambassador,” it added.


World’s smallest snake makes big comeback

World’s smallest snake makes big comeback
Updated 25 July 2025

World’s smallest snake makes big comeback

World’s smallest snake makes big comeback

WASHINGTON: A snake so small it could be mistaken for a worm has been spotted in Barbados, nearly two decades after it was thought to have been “lost” to science.
The Barbados threadsnake  was found hiding under a rock in central Barbados during an ecological survey in March by the Barbados Ministry of the Environment and National Beautification and conservation group Re:wild.
“Barbados threadsnakes are blind snakes, so they’re very cryptic,” said Connor Blades, a project officer with the Ministry of Environment in Barbados who helped make the finding, in a statement.
“They’re quite rare also, it seems. There have only been a handful of confirmed sightings since 1889, so there are not many people who have ever seen it, unfortunately.”
Measuring just three to four inches long  when fully grown — tiny enough to almost fit on a US quarter coin — the Barbados threadsnake is the world’s smallest species of snake.
It is distinguished by orange stripes along its back, eyes on the sides of its head and a small scale on its snout.
“When you are so accustomed to looking for things and you don’t see them, you are shocked when you actually find it,” said Justin Springer of Re:wild, who made the discovery alongside Blades.
“You can’t believe it. That’s how I felt. You don’t want to get your hopes up too high.”
The breakthrough came after more than a year of searching, as the pair upturned rocks trapped beneath a tree root.
The tiny snake, which was found alongside an earthworm, was taken to the University of West Indies for careful examination under a microscope — it closely resembles the Brahminy blind snake, an invasive species, so the finding had to be validated — before it was returned to the forest.
Only two percent of the Caribbean island’s primary forest remains intact, with the rest cleared for agriculture since the start of the colonial era 400 years ago.
The Barbados threadsnake remains particularly vulnerable since it reproduces sexually and females lay a clutch of only one egg. Female Brahminy blind snakes, by contrast, can produce fertile eggs without mating.
“The threadsnake’s rediscovery is also a call to all of us as Barbadians that forests in Barbados are very special and need protection,” said Springer. “Not just for the threadsnake, but for other species as well. For plants, animals and our heritage.”