I was reminded last week of the “cheeky
white mentality” that some 15 years ago alerted us to the alarming rise
in game poaching, and forced us to take tough action that stemmed the
carnage.
It was world famous paleontologist and
National Museums director Richard Leakey who led the campaign
highlighting the decimation of the elephant population in Tsavo National
Park.
The then minister for Tourism and Wildlife, Mr
George Muhoho, disputed the numbers, insisting there was no crisis and
came out with that racist slur.
Fortunately, Dr Leakey caught the ear of the only office at the time that mattered in the land.
In
swift order, President Daniel arap Moi disbanded the corrupt Game
Department of the ministry, and replaced it with the brand new Kenya
Wildlife Service, with none other than Dr Leakey as its first director.
Although
he was himself kicked out a few years later after falling out with Mr
Moi, Dr Leakey exited having built an enviable organisation that played a
big role in saving our elephants, rhino, lions, leopards, cheetah and
other valuable and endangered species from the marauding bands of
poachers that previously had licence to roam free in our national parks,
game reserves and wildlife dispersal areas.
SENIOR GOVERNMENT FIGURES
Why do I go back to history? Because last week, Dr Leakey was at it again.
The legendary conservationist broke a long silence to add his voice to
growing concerns about the return of uncontrolled poaching.
He
appealed for President Uhuru Kenyatta’s direct intervention to check
the suspected involvement of senior government figures and powerful
politicians in poaching, and suggested that those presently charged with
protecting our precious wildlife be asked to look for alternate
employment.
The reaction from KWS indicated a bureaucracy that felt like an endangered species. The entire top brass was assembled to deny that poaching had reached alarming levels.
The KWS management insisted that there was nothing in the poaching statistics to make it a national crisis.
They
did not blame negative publicity to any “cheeky white mentality”, but
did make vague allusions to unofficial figures cooked up by civil
society meddlers, foreign activists and “briefcase conservationists”.
That
self-preservation might have been a classic example of what ails this
land. It’s always about refusing to take responsibility, evading
scrutiny and blaming all criticism, however genuine, on some dark
external powers; the old Moi-era game of ‘foreign masters’, ‘enemies of
development’, and other scapegoats manufactured to make us rally round
our own.
No one can honestly dispute now that rhino and
elephant are being killed at record levels to satisfy the insatiable
appetite for their tusks and horns in China and other parts of the Far
East.
UNHINDERED ACCESS
There
are many Kenyans who will say they don’t care if all the animals are
wiped out to free the land for the landless and for growing food.
However,
we are in the age of terrorism. Our concern should be that we are
allowing heavily armed brigands to roam unchallenged across Kenya
killing all the game they need, and giving them unhindered access to our
international gateways for the export of their cargo.
So
generous have we been that the international cartels controlling the
trade have found our airports and seaports convenient points for
transshipping ivory and rhino horn poached as far afield as South Africa
and West Africa.
You might still say that you don’t
care, but give a thought to the fact that the international criminal
gangs controlling the trade have been proven to have direct links with
the merchants of death who deal in narcotic drugs and illegal arms.
Ultimately,
those tri-evils – poaching, narcotics and illicit arms – have direct
connections to the arming and financing of terrorism.
Therefore
when a shopping mall in Nairobi or a church in Mombasa is attacked by
terrorists, we must be conscious that those murderous deeds are aided
and abetted by business and political merchants in the corridors of
power who run the poaching gangs, provide free passage for the
contraband, or prefer to look the other way when employed to protect our
wildlife or ensure our national security.
mgaitho@ke.nation media.com & Twitter: @MachariaGaitho
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