By CLIFFORD GIKUNDA
In Summary
- Wildlife in the Tsavo habitat in Kenya’s coastal region is under threat due to diminishing pasture caused by human encroachment.
- Arresting and prosecuting offenders is a difficult task partly because livestock owners themselves never enter the parks, leaving the animals to children, some as young as 10 years old.
- In a bid to enforce the law, KWS has fenced off an area that holds livestock seized in the parks.
Wildlife in the Tsavo habitat in Kenya’s coastal region is under threat due to diminishing pasture caused by human encroachment.
The threats to the animals are compounded by laxity in enforcing the Kenya Wildlife Service Act 2013.
Daniel Kipkosgey, a KWS assistant warden and officer in charge
of the Tsavo West National Park southern sector said herding in the park
poses a threat to the ecosystem.
“Intrusion by livestock and poachers posing as herders, remains
the biggest threat to the pasture,” said Mr Kipkosgey. “The transfer of
diseases between livestock and wildlife is a big risk too; the livestock
bring ticks to the park that end up affecting the wildebeest and
buffaloes. The interaction sometimes brings about unexplainable deaths
among the animals.”
According to the KWS Act 2013, any person who commits an offence
in respect of an endangered or threatened species or in respect of any
trophy of that endangered or threatened species is liable upon
conviction to a fine of not less than Ksh20 million ($200,000 million)
or imprisonment for life or both.
10-year-old herders
“Herding falls under encroachment, and those responsible are,
therefore liable for prosecution, but this law remains on paper,” said
Mr Kipkosgey.
Arresting and prosecuting offenders is a difficult task partly
because livestock owners themselves never enter the parks, leaving the
animals to children, some as young as 10 years old, Mr Kipkosgey said.
“This makes the implementation of best practices within Kenya’s protected areas a challenge,” he said.
In a bid to enforce the law, KWS has fenced off an area that holds livestock seized in the parks.
In the first week, 1,261 heads of livestock grazing in the park
were impounded and two owners arrested. They have been charged in court
and fined Ksh100,000 ($1,000) each or six months imprisonment. The
offenders were also asked to pay the KWS Ksh298,000 ($2,980) operating
fee within 14 days.
The communities bordering national parks do not, however,
understand why their livestock must suffer when there is enough pasture
inside the parks. During the dry season, finding feed and water for
livestock is an uphill task that forces the herders to graze in the
parks.
The wildlife reserve is split into Tsavo West and Tsavo East by
the railway line from Mombasa to the interior of Kenya. It houses the
largest elephant population in the country, estimated at 11,076 from
over 45,000 in 1974 — a drop attributed to poaching, drought and natural
deaths. Also, while the mortality rate stands at four per cent per
annum, the growth rate is two per cent.
Tsavo also hosts rhinos, hippos, lions, cheetah, leopards,
buffalos and diverse plant and bird species, including the threatened
corncrake.
According to the deputy warden of Tsavo East National Park David
Karanja, sometimes large herds of livestock invade the parks, making
them look like ranches.
No comments :
Post a Comment