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The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check - Food - Nairaland

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The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by Calcium33: 2:57pm On Mar 18, 2021
The fish caught in a Nigerian village is not worth millions of dollars

Social media posts shared thousands of times claim that a man in Nigeria caught a fish worth $2.6 million, and his village ate the fish instead of cashing in. However, the value of this fish is hugely overestimated. The $2.6 million figure can be traced to the prize money won at an annual fishing competition in the United States, and does not represent its market value. A witness told AFP Fact Check that the fish was sold off in pieces at an affordable price.

“A Nigerian man captured a fish worth $2.6 million. Him and his village people ate it (sic),” reads the caption of the Facebook post shared on March 9, 2021.

Similar posts have been shared thousands of times in South Africa. The post has also been shared on various blogs and on Twitter by the account Africa Facts Zone. This tweet was retweeted more than 5,500 times and received more than 13,000 likes.

The viral posts feature photos of a man in yellow posing next to a large fish. The image is accompanied by the screenshot of a CNBC article with the title, “At a high-stakes tournament, a lucky fisherman reels in $2.6 million in cold hard cash”. Several of the social media posts and blog headlines called the community “ignorant” for eating the fish.

The man in the pictures
Some of the photos in the social media posts feature a man in a yellow t-shirt, which led certain social media users to claim that he is the fisherman who caught the fish. However, this is false. The man, named Zion Godwin, said he was visiting a relative in a fishing settlement in the Andoni Local Government Area of Rivers State, Nigeria when the fish was caught, but he was not the fisherman.

“Actually, when the man brought the fish all the people there could not give the name of the fish. Some said is swordfish while some said is blue marlin (sic),” Godwin wrote to AFP Fact Check via WhatsApp.

It took about eight men to carry the fish from the shore, he said. With assistance from locals and a Google search, they confirmed that it was a blue marlin.

“From my estimate, the fish is up to seven feet by length. There is no equipment there to know the weight,” Godwin said.

Godwin added that the fisherman first tried to find a buyer for the whole fish but was unable to find anyone, and ended up portioning it into six-inch pieces, which were smoked and sold to locals.

“The smallest piece was sold from 2,000 naira ($5.25) while the bigger pieces was further divided to affordable price (sic),” said Godwin.

The value of a blue marlin
The alleged $2.6 million value of the fish was taken from a July 2019 article by CNBC on “the high-stakes world of tournament sports fishing”. However, this price is high above the market value of marlin fish.

The White Marlin Open in Ocean City, Maryland in the US is a week-long fishing competition held every August. It’s been running for nearly five decades.

According to the article, the $2.6 million payout was for the largest white marlin caught during the 2018 competition; the largest blue marlin received a prize of $924,000. The fish in Nigeria is a blue marlin, so even in the competition, the prize was not $2.6 million.

“Every year the multimillion-dollar jackpot is divided across more than a dozen prizes. In 2018, it included a head-spinning $904,000 payout for the biggest tuna, a $924,000 prize for the largest blue marlin — and the $2.6 million mega-payout for the largest white marlin reeled in,” the CNBC article explains.

The competition organisers confirmed with AFP Fact Check that the Nigerian fisherman could not have raked in millions of dollars for his catch.

“In the United States, there is not a commercial market for blue marlin. This fish would only have value if caught in a tournament that offers prize money for blue marlin,” said Madelyne Rowan, tournament director.

Furthermore, tournaments have steep entry fees.

“In order for a blue marlin to have the potential to be worth a million dollars in the White Marlin Open, approximately $20,000 in entry fees would need to be paid,” Rowan added.

Sean Amor, a captain for Hooked on Africa fishing charters in South Africa, agreed with Rowan. Amor has over two decades of fishing experience and told AFP Fact Check that the market value for marlin would never sell for millions of dollars.

Source: https://factcheck.afp.com/fish-caught-nigerian-village-not-worth-millions-dollars

6 Likes

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by nawena: 3:05pm On Mar 18, 2021
So what's the price of the blue Marlin Fish? It's very important, we don't know the next person that will get hold of the fish.

108 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by Slynation(m): 3:15pm On Mar 18, 2021
So what's the point of this counter post....just to justify the fact a man ate something that would have fetch him lots of money abi!!

66 Likes

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by alpharoyalty: 3:21pm On Mar 18, 2021
That fish is not worth more than 150k in naira.

83 Likes 5 Shares

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by Freestainworld(m): 3:52pm On Mar 18, 2021
what's the worth then?

7 Likes 2 Shares

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by OnlyDeCapPlease(m): 6:49pm On Mar 18, 2021
alpharoyalty:
That fish does not worth more than 150k in naira.

Still a lot of money for fisherman.

66 Likes 3 Shares

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by ElectronicMoney(m): 7:16pm On Mar 18, 2021
alpharoyalty:
That fish does not worth more than 150k in naira.

Exactly!

4 Likes

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by GreaterFuture(m): 7:19pm On Mar 18, 2021
Hmmmn...
Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by stano2(m): 7:19pm On Mar 18, 2021
Yes..,.we know say na false.
We shared the post, so nigga would be shocked.....One day, even squirrel no go remain for this country, we kill anything to eat

15 Likes

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by slawormiir: 7:19pm On Mar 18, 2021
Damnnn niggarrrr
Isoright...you all be asking questions......read the article


“In the United States, there is not a commercial market for blue marlin. This fish would only have value if caught in a tournament that offers prize money for blue marlin,” said Madelyne Rowan, tournament director.

That is it....for all those lazy ass moda fuckkkers unable to read...
The fish is worth nothing......the thing is annoying that most nairaland members don't read..they just comment..
If a foreigner read the comments when dey always dey first page Of most thread here he or she will have bad educational perception about Nigeria....

86 Likes 11 Shares

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by stano2(m): 7:19pm On Mar 18, 2021
Whatttttt
Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by Felabrity: 7:19pm On Mar 18, 2021
The guy after the guy above me


Damn niggar kill you there

25 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by Felabrity: 7:19pm On Mar 18, 2021
How will a fish be worth 2.6 million dollars?

1 Like

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by Simplyleo: 7:19pm On Mar 18, 2021
Okay.

But e worth $1m shey.

That is still hundreds of millions

1 Like

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by saphiere(f): 7:20pm On Mar 18, 2021
I saw the news weeks ago and since it was coming from a Nigerian man's mouth I didn't bother to post it.
I knew this fish can't worth that amount.

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by vincentjk(m): 7:20pm On Mar 18, 2021
Would've reared this cute fish inside my tank at home had I caught it.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by fourboys: 7:21pm On Mar 18, 2021
which one?? D one wey don enter belle since??

1 Like

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by TriCee: 7:21pm On Mar 18, 2021
Too late, since we kuku pepper soup anything we catch.
My brothers have eaten millions of dollars in one night....had they known.

1 Like

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by Bornsinner7: 7:21pm On Mar 18, 2021
Felabrity:
The guy after the guy above me


Damn niggar kill you there
grin damn niggarr that niggarr is the real niggarr of Benin city, he rides around in his audio lexus, GLK and venza
Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by motherlode: 7:21pm On Mar 18, 2021
Slynation:
So what's the point of this counter post....just to justify the fact a man ate something that would have fetch him lots of money abi!!

To curb spread of fake news!

Many at times... A lot of people make or share certain posts without verifying authenticity, which is quite bad. Given how detrimental it can be if such posts were highly sensitive.

9 Likes

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by integritylady(f): 7:21pm On Mar 18, 2021
Man ate his future
Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by Commonguy(m): 7:21pm On Mar 18, 2021
I trust my fellow Naija brethren
they will eat the fish.. wetin concern them
Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by punisha: 7:21pm On Mar 18, 2021
grin
20k USD to enter the competition
pls tell your brothers that have gone fishing for blue marlin to come back home.

5 Likes

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by merits(m): 7:22pm On Mar 18, 2021
smiley

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by Fuckingmallam45(m): 7:22pm On Mar 18, 2021
K
Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by etibaba(m): 7:22pm On Mar 18, 2021
Nairaland is gradually becoming a dumping ground, this news have been all over blogs since two weeks now and it's just coming here.

2 Likes

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by brightisodje(m): 7:22pm On Mar 18, 2021
he should have kept it on the fridge and wait for buyer. how wish he know.
Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by Sofistcatdmoron: 7:23pm On Mar 18, 2021
grin
Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by shanktang(m): 7:23pm On Mar 18, 2021
I told them so but they would always argue otherwise.
Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by berbs: 7:23pm On Mar 18, 2021
How much ooo. All these long epistle don tire person.

2 Likes

Re: The Blue Marlin Fish Caught By A Nigerian Man Not Worth $2.6M - AFP Fact Check by oz4real83(m): 7:23pm On Mar 18, 2021
I didn't bother much about the post, I knew the OP was ignorant.

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