Monday, December 23, 2024

In once tranquil N.S. town, intimidation in the lobster industry now all too common

Must read

METEGHAN, N.S. — Standing by a bullet hole in his dining room wall, lobster buyer Geoffrey Jobert says such attacks have become an all-too-familiar reality in Nova Scotia’s largest fishery.

Overnight on Nov. 23, someone fired a single shot that passed through three rooms in his Mavillette, N.S., home, with the shell ending its journey in a rocking chair where Jobert occasionally sits during the daylight hours.

“It was pretty intense in the morning when I noticed the shot. My heart was beating … but at the same time it’s commonplace around the community for this to happen,” he said at his residence, as two security guards from his company Lobster Hub Inc. kept watch outside.

The 30-year-old and his younger brother came to the area from Halifax to take over his father’s processing plant five years ago and now employ 100 people. He’s enjoyed making friends in the francophone town and paddling along a stunning beach near his home when he has a few spare hours.

But last year, threats started after he agreed to buy the catch of a licensed, commercial harvester who was no longer willing to provide his catch to facilities allegedly purchasing illegally caught lobster. And Jobert soon learned he wasn’t the only person in the communities along the Acadian shore who experienced late-night attacks.

Sgt. Jeff LeBlanc, commander of the RCMP detachment in nearby Meteghan, estimates that over the past two years officers have laid 51 charges against what he refers to as a “criminal organization” related to illegal fisheries, including four shots fired into homes in the past seven months.

About half an hour’s drive north from Jobert’s home, there’s an isolated cabin in the woods, dislodged from its foundations by a front-end loader that tried to topple it over. At the time of the damage, the property belonged to Joel Comeau, a former president of the Maritime Fishermen’s Union who had been critical of buyers who purchase lobster caught outside of the regulated seasons.

The Canadian Press spoke to two commercial lobster fishermen who said they’d been targeted and who declined to provide their names for fear of retaliation. “I can’t take another hit right now,” said one veteran fisherman. “I’ve been hit more than once.”

Truck driver Wayne Saulnier of Meteghan said in a telephone interview Thursday it’s possible to be “caught in the middle” of the conflict, even when you’re uninvolved.

His tractor-trailer “was in the wrong place at the wrong time” when it went up in flames the night of Dec. 12, 2023, after he parked on the property adjacent to Jobert’s processing plant. “Apparently they filled tires with gasoline and shoved them under the truck and it more or less blew up with fumes,” said Saulnier.

Latest article