First Lady Margaret
Kenyatta, the Administrator, United Nations Development Programme ( UNDP), Ms.
Helen Clark display the signed partnership agreement on wildlife conservation
and anti-poaching in Kenya as Cabinet Secretary for Environment, Water `and
Natural Resources Prof. Judy Wakhungu applauds during a luncheon hosted by the
First Lady at State House, Nairobi.
Nairobi, Kenya: Combating poaching will not
succeed unless communities are empowered to help prevent its alarming upsurge,
said the first lady Margaret Kenyatta and the Administrator of the UN
Development Programme, Helen Clark while launching a new conservancy programme
in Amboseli. “This horrific phenomenon must stop. It is depleting our natural heritage,
destroying lives and incomes, and fuelling corruption and insecurity”, said Ms.
Kenyatta at the launch of the programme. Wildlife attracts over one million
tourists per year, generates over 12 percent of the national revenue, and
directly employs over 230,000 Kenyans. Estimates put the value of a live
elephant in Kenya at over USD 1 million per animal given its estimated life
span and the services it renders the wildlife tourism industry.
In Kenya and
the rest of the African continent, the current poaching crisis is threatening
to make a disastrous impact on livelihoods, poverty rates and opportunities for
sustainable development. The scheme will create new livelihoods for communities
living on the outskirts of Amboseli, an 8,000 kilometre-square natural reserve
spanning the border between Kenya and Tanzania. By investing in sustainable
farming, eco-tourism, and conservancy, the programme is expected to provide
people with an alternative to killing wild animals. See also: President Uhuru
urged to visit Kisumu “ Poaching pushes vulnerable and endangered species
toward extinction, fuels corruption and conflict, destroys lives, and deepens
poverty and inequality,” said Helen Clark. “We must all work together to stop
this trade.” In addition to creating new sources of revenue, the programme will
give local communities, through the creation of village councils, the authority
and capacity to plan and manage the use of their own land. The scheme will also
aim to create better processes for information-sharing between communities,
park rangers and national authorities, while raising awareness of the impact of
poaching in affected areas. The Government of Kenya has accelerated its efforts
to control poaching, increasing surveillance and passing a law making it easier
to convict those responsible.
0 comments:
Post a Comment