By The Citizen
Posted Monday, December 29 2014 at 10:06
Posted Monday, December 29 2014 at 10:06
In Summary
- The situation was particularly serious in 2012 and 2013 when consignments of elephant tusks worth billions of shillings were seized overseas and traced back to East Africa, specifically Tanzania and Kenya.
Reports that concerted wildlife conservation
efforts are showing signs of success are good news indeed as the year
draws to a close. It will be recalled that Tanzania has for a long time
been in the
international spotlight for the wanton slaughter of wildlife, particularly elephants, in its national parks, game reserves and other protected areas. The country was in the headlines for all the wrong reasons.
international spotlight for the wanton slaughter of wildlife, particularly elephants, in its national parks, game reserves and other protected areas. The country was in the headlines for all the wrong reasons.
The situation was particularly serious in 2012 and
2013 when consignments of elephant tusks worth billions of shillings
were seized overseas and traced back to East Africa, specifically
Tanzania and Kenya.
With Tanzania’s elephant population in a nosedive,
the government launched Operation Tokomeza (eradicate) to stamp out
poaching and save elephants from imminent extinction.
Operation Tokomeza was a short-lived undertaking
and was suspended following allegations of widespread human rights
abuses. The controversy led to the sacking of Natural Resources and
Tourism minister Khamis Kagasheki along with four other ministers.
When Mr Lazaro Nyalandu was put in the hot seat at
the Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism in February 2014,
Tanzania’s reputation was in tatters, and he faced seemingly
insurmountable odds to stop the unrestrained slaughter in our national
parks and game reserves.
With powerful vested interests at the centre of
the illegal trade in ivory, Mr Nyalandu’s work was cut out, but the new
minister adopted a new approach to tackling poaching, which is showing
promising results.
Instead of issuing directives and threats from the
comfort of his plush office in Dar es Salaam, the minister has been out
and about engaging local communities in conservation efforts and making
them feel an important link in the current drive to elephants and other
endangered species.
Hopefully, this will continue in 2015, but it
should not be lost on us that conservation efforts will succeed only if
all stakeholders pull in one direction with the aim of ending poaching
once and for all.
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