Community development initiatives reduce poaching
Maputo, 15 Jun (AIM) – The wide variety of initiatives crafted by the South Africa-based Peace Parks Foundation has not only contributed to reducing poaching in several Mozambican conservation areas but has also boosted the livelihoods of thousands of people living in the surrounding areas.
The non-profit organisation has been working in partnership with the National Administration of Conservation Areas (ANAC) in the Banhine, Zinave, and Limpopo National Parks, as well as the Maputo Special Reserve and the Ponta d’Ouro Partial Marine Reserve, where they conduct restocking programmes and ensure the animals are well looked after.
Antony Alexander, Senior Project Manager at the Peace Parks Foundation, told AIM that it seeks to develop a long-term relationship with the communities, fostering a number of approaches which have raised awareness about the need for conservation and wildlife protection.
Firstly, he said, a regulatory framework has been put in place, through which 20 per cent of the parks’ revenues are channelled to communities, so that they see the benefit in the development of the conservation areas.
Secondly, Alexander highlighted the benefit of increased employment, taking the Zinave National Park as an example, where about 150 community members have been employed on a permanent basis developing tourist infrastructures inside the park.
“We have already started to establish governance structures in every single park and have identified the beneficiaries connected to the communities”, Alexander explained. “We have supported the creation of structures that can elect their own representatives and create the councils, which can communicate with the parks and also make decisions”.
In every park, he stated, “we have conservation agriculture drives, under which the beneficiaries learn how to grow crops in a more conservation wise manner, where they can produce without the need to clear vast tracks of land”. There are also reproductive health programmes involving women in the communities and some activists in the villages.
There are mariculture and aquaculture programmes underway in Ponta d’Ouro as revenue generation packages, and also training initiatives such as skills development in carpentry and brickmaking, and small business skills for entrepreneurial ventures which have made a significant impact on the livelihoods of the communities.
The Limpopo National Park, for instance, has a health programme focusing mainly on livestock and its management, and a programme intended to reduce human-wildlife conflict.
For Banhine National Park, which has not received a lot of attention, the Peace Parks Foundation has secured US$5 million for the next five years. Alexander guaranteed that a substantial amount of the budget will go to the communities through the improvement of water systems initiative and health programmes.
“So, we have a wide range of tools and projects to ensure that communities see value in conservation, and the park also gets value out of it. Obviously, combined with protection efforts inside the park, we believe the animals have been and will continue to be looked after and their numbers will surely continue to grow”, he said.
As for poaching, he said studies and practice show that intelligence is highly effective and is the way forward. A sound relationship with the communities, he argued, builds better intelligence which becomes far more effective in the anti-poaching operation.
Instead of having over 100 rangers in a park, Alexander said it is better to have a community of thousands of people who are supporting the anti-poaching effort.
(AIM)