Tanzania: Unesco Starts Dialogue Regarding Ngorongoro Future

Arusha — THE United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) and the Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism have jointly formed special dialogue with residents to address a number of conflicts and controversies in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area Authority.
"The project, running under the theme 'People and Wildlife: Past Present and Future', is aimed at connecting wildlife management and sustainable development of communities in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, which is one of the designated World Heritage Sites in Tanzania," stated UNESCO Country Representative Abdul Coulibaly.
The Minister for Livestock and fisheries, Mr Kaika Saning'o Ole Telele, officially launched the dialogue in Arusha and used the platform to warn against the tendency of favouring wildlife at the expense of human residents in the NCAA.
"Ngorongoro is the only place on earth where human beings, in this case members of the Maasai tribe, live in harmony with wild animals; but for years international organisations have been advocates of the wildlife in the conservation area forgetting that there are also people with own basic needs and rights," said Mr Telele.
NCAA's Chief Conservator, Mr Freddy Manongi, expressed high hopes on the dialogue between the main stakeholders of Ngorongoro, adding that it was high time they all started working together to address recurring problems in the world heritage site instead of each being left to grumble on their own.

"I have to admit that balancing between conservation, tourism and pastoralism as well as other human activities and survival in the Ngorongoro area, can be a tough challenge and needs patience, dialogues like this and mutual understanding," stated Dr Manongi.
Mr Tate Oleku, a resident of Olbalbal Ward in Ngorongoro Divion, was of the view that ever since farming was restricted in the NCAA, allegedly under the directives of UNESCO, the people in the conservation area have been suffering hunger and malnutrition because droughts have been decimating their livestock, leaving them with nothing.
A consultant with UNESCO, Ms Nicole Bolomey, said, they have been conducting series of studies in the NCAA but most of their publications, though readily available online, were yet to be directly conveyed to local people and she was hoping that through the dialogues this problem will be solved as well.


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