Funds to save the Virunga park must be subject to safeguards say Congo’ critics

EU MONEY TO SAFE THE VIRUNGA NATIONAL PARK – BUT WERE ARE THE SAFEGUARDS

(Posted 05th October 2014)

Announcements that the Virunga National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, will be getting more EU funding after already spending some 30+ million Euros over the past 25 years, have met with instant demands that safeguards must be provided by the regime in Kinshasha on several areas of concern.

First must any oil prospecting cease completely, and ongoing work be halted with the surveyors and other teams withdrawn and not to return. Secondly must the regime guarantee the geographical integrity of the park and not, as it suits greedy and corrupt politicians, gradually excise areas which might have oil deposits underground to the detriment of the entire ecosystem and primate habitat, as after all the Virunga park is one of the worlds’ greatest biodiversity hotspots.

In addition have conservation sources suggested must the regime finally divorce itself from the FDLR which it has long tolerated in Eastern Congo, at times openly collaborated with and allegedly covertly supported since the killer militias came across the border from Rwanda after the 1994 genocide which they were responsible for.

Earlier in the year was the Belgian Virunga Chief Warden Emmanuel de Merode nearly killed in a targeted ambush and while he has since recuperated and resumed his duties, none of those behind the assassination attempt have been brought to book.

The EU support is to be channeled through a programme named Biodiversity for Life or in short B4Life but conservationists concerned with Kinshasa’s environmental, security and human rights records have already vowed to take this to the European parliament if necessary to ensure that ironclad safeguards are this time built into the financial support programme to prevent, as was the case in the past, the regime handing out oil prospecting and mining concessions in direct violation of the spirit of prior agreements.

Read more about the complexities of local politics vis a vis the protection of the Virunga National Park by clicking on https://atcnews.org/2014/06/10/virunga-national-park-the-next-sacrificial-lamb-on-the-altar-of-development/ or else check out these two sites: www.visitvirunga.org / www.virunga.org

Meanwhile, across the border in Rwanda, has the government, one with an outstanding record vis a vis environmental protection one should add, put pen to paper last week to sign for a 9.5 million US Dollar grant and support programme from the World Bank to continue the restoration and protection of Gishwati Forest. The Rwandan government will add a further 2.6 million US Dollars as a counterpart financing of the project.

Rwanda has the declared policy to restore a forest cover across the country measuring some 30 percent of her geographical area, cognizant of the fact that vital water towers need protecting and the country’s booming tourism industry, relying on an intact environment to showcase primates and birdlife, requires such natural assets in order to continue the upwards trend. With tourism this year expected to rake in over 300 million US Dollars, which made it the country’s largest foreign exchange earner, it is little wonder that the government is keen to play its part to ensure that biodiversity hotspots are vigorously protected.

Forest restoration has been ongoing for several years now, including taking tough measures to relocate encroachers, and the runaway success of Nyungwe Forest, since it was elevated to national park status, speaks for itself how such policies can help create employment and economic opportunities unlike in other countries in the region where forests are often still thought of as a source of timber, firewood and charcoal with little regard of the short, medium and longer term impact on the environment and local microclimate. The project is due to run over an initial 5 year period but can be extended into a second phase according to a regular source in Kigali.

For information about Rwanda’s attractions click on www.rwandatourism.com