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Environmental Awareness Through Media Productions

Archive for Uganda

How on Earth can the Rift Valley’s Biodiversity Survive?

The National Geographic November 2011 Issue

Decades of civil war has taken its toll on the rich biodiversity of the East African Rift Valley, a monumental geological phenomenon that separates the Nubian tectonic plate from the Somalian plate before forking down either side of Uganda. The region has seen the numerous conflicts over the last century including the most deadly since WWII: The Great African War, which saw around 5 million die. It also happens to be home to the highest biomass of large mammals in the world as well s huge reserves of important minerals such as gold, tin and coltan. This, combined with the huge population increase that places like the Democratic Republic of Congo have seen recently (for example in Goma, pictured, which is located next to an active volcano), has made for a volatile situation. People want land, and there is only a limited amount to go around.

For the national parks of the area, times are not good. Africa’s oldest national park, Virunga National Park founded in 1925, is a ‘warzone’ with many people already settled inside the park’s boundaries. The lodges are gutted and tourism is almost non-existent following the Rwandan genocide of 1994. The remaining park rangers are constantly battling with local militias, called Mai-Mai fighters, who control illegal fishing and charcoal production. Conogolese soldiers stationed on the western shore of Lake Edward have decimated populations of megafauna. 96% of the park’s hippo population has been slaughtered and sold for bush meat by militias. If the park rangers’ job is hard enough, they also face direct threats to their lives. In response to the rangers destroying illegal fishing boats (the fishing fleet of Lake Albert has swelled from 760 in the 1960s to 6,000 today), the Mai-Mai have put out bounties on the rangers. Furthermore, 100,000 villagers have demanded the government to reduce the park by 90%, or they’ll take it by force.

The Ugandan Queen Elizabeth Park (above), established in 1952, is not a lot better. By 1980 elephant numbers had dropped from 3,000 to 150. A common belief among the crowded villages is that national parks are making the population poor. In Uganda’s Kagombe Forest Reserve, a presidential decree has disallowed National Forestry Authority from evicting immigrant settlers, largely because of the upcoming elections. In order to placate the native populations about the rise of immigrants, politicians then announced that they too should seize land (see picture below). Most wildlife has now been hunted out of the reserve, a once important corridor for chimps and other animals. According to the forestry authority’s sector manager, Patrick Kakeeto, “they’re cutting all of this down and we can’t touch them. For us, it’s kind of psychoprofessional torture.”

Kony 2012

LMV is orientated towards environmental issues but today we want to make an exception. Kony 2012 is a truly incredible documentary (and incredible in every sense of the word: content, style, production, sound, etc) and one that strikes a chord from the very beginning. It is a film by Invisible Children ‘that aims to make Joseph Kony [the Ugandan warlord] famous, not to celebrate him, but to raise support for his arrest and set a precedent for international justice.’ Please watch it and help by going to the following pages:

Join TRI or Donate to Invisible Children: http://bit.ly/yp5Ffv
Purchase KONY 2012 products: http://invisiblechildrenstore.myshopify.com/
Sign the Pledge: http://www.causes.com/causes/227-invisible-children

Dramatic Rise in Mountain Gorilla Numbers

www.guardian.co.uk 8th December 2010

The fight to save the endangered mountain gorillas of central Africa seems to have paid off according to the latest consensus on the rare species compiled in March and April this year.  The gorillas, which are spread across three national parks in Uganda, Rwanda, and the Democratic Republic of Congo, have surged in numbers rising from 380 in 2003 to 480 today (a rise of 26.3%). In total, the gorilla population of the 450-square-kilometre Virunga Massif within the three parks has risen at a rate of 3.7% annually. The recovery has been credited to the enormous effort to preserve the species. One key factor is the International Gorilla Conservation Programme (IGCP) that has engaged local communities in more economically sustainable projects than poaching. These include bee-keeping for honey and hand-crafts for tourists. Another factor is the on-site presence of veterinarians who monitor gorilla groups for many hours a day thereby reducing the death by disease and infection from snares, which locals leave out for antelope. The vets also deter poachers. The director of the IGCP, Eugène Rutagarama, has claimed that the rise has mostly taken place in Rwanda where anti-poaching patrols have improved significantly since a restructuring of the country’s national parks. Thereafter, park rangers were better equipped and earned more money which increased productivity. Rangers in Rwanda currently remove about 1,500 traps a year.

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