Gorilla Journal 17, December 1998
News from Kahuzi-Biega
After the war, which started in October 1996, the security at the Tshivanga
station began to improve until the beginning of 1998. Normal park duties
were gradually resumed for example, surveillance and research.
Some development activities around the park, especially some rehabilitation
activities and awareness campaigns were started again. The restoration
of the infrastructure of Kahuzi-Biega National Park and especially of
Tshivanga, which was nearly completed after the storm that had devastated
the park in 1996 and destroyed most of the installations.
Unfortunately, this glimmer of hope was very brief because the same crimes
that had been committed during the first war were repeated during the
second war that started August 2, 1998. More destruction resulted.
Since that date, most activities have been discontinued, in the interior
as well as the exterior of the park, because of insecurity. In the meantime,
those responsible for the park and the project Kahuzi-Biega/GTZ (Gesellschaft
für technische Zusammenarbeit - developmental aid organisation
of the German government) have not been idle. The park and project employees
who had stayed in Bukavu tried to make realistic and feasible plans to
deal with the critical period until the situation returned to normal again.
Accordingly, it was decided to continue two activities: surveillance and
local awareness. The aim of the surveillance was to reduce the destruction
of the park's resources during the crisis. The park has been a battlefield
for different parties from time to time. It is therefore difficult to
plan activities in the interior of the park. In order to discourage troublemakers
who take advantage of the crisis to carry out their destructive activities,
the surveillance will now be directed around the park, where we are encouraging
the traditional chiefs and the local administration to organize mixed
patrols of rangers and local police. This form of collaboration had also
been successful during and after the 1996 war.
By means of sensitization, we want to convince the population to reduce
the present excessive destruction of the park's resources. To this end,
the severe problems that the Kahuzi-Biega National Park experienced during
the two wars were reported clearly to the local political and administrative
authorities as well as the people living around the park, and appropriate
solutions were found. As for surveillance, the priority with sensitization
was to encourage communication between traditional chiefs and the local
administration, and to ensure their inclusion in each activity.
We have learned from our surveillance efforts that large mammals, especially
elephants, have already suffered from the poaching with firearms. So far,
we have no evidence that any gorillas have been killed recently, according
to the team of pygmy pisteurs who enter the park to localize the habituated
groups. They ask their brothers to preserve this species because the economy
of the park and their own survival depends on them.
In face of this reality, we wonder if this park and its biological diversity
can survive in the long term if the destruction cannot be stopped soon.
This World Heritage Site was at its height
4 years ago and was then the pride in particular of South Kivu, the Congo
and informed scientists. Now it is generally sinking into disarray. The
war has not stopped illegal land distribution in the park, especially
in the corridor between the mountain and lowland sectors. Soon there will
be two separate blocks of the Kahuzi-Biega National Park because the corridor
which connects these two parts (mountain and lowland part) is being destroyed.
Should we let this World Heritage Site deteriorate in plain view of the
whole world? This is an alarm cry from the Kahuzi-Biega National Park
directed at everybody who loves nature!
Mbake Sivha
Mbake Sivha studied biology at the
University of Kisangani, Zaire, and worked in the IZCN/GTZ conservation
project at Kahuzi-Biega National Park. She then specialized at Würzburg
University, Germany, in animal ecology, biology of the tropics and sensitization
of the population for environmental problems. From 1994 to 1999 she worked
in the IZCN/GTZ project in sensitization and primate research.
After joining the IGCP for some years, she is now working for FFI.
Kahuzi-Biega
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