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Archive for April, 2008

Apr 29 2008

Soldiers Beat Up 3 Rangers

Published by admin under Uncategorized

This is Diddy. Innocent and I have been busy learning new skills at a computer workshop. Since we still do not have access to the gorillas, this is a good time for that kind of training.

One thing we have been able to do is fight the charcoal trade. As you know from the last post by Emmanuel, the roadblock at Kibati has worked well, despite the complicity of the military in the trade.

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These pictures show a military truck rented by smugglers to transport charcoal.

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The situation between us and the military is so bad that three of our Rangers (Mwanga bin Assani, Majori Gakuru, and Ndianabo Ido) have been attacked and injured by soldiers in the past few weeks. We now have 60 bags of confiscated charcoal at the Kibati roadblock, but it is not safe to keep such a large amount there. Thanks to your donations, we are renting a truck to take the stockpile to Rumangabo Station where it is safer. 

Tomorrow we are going to a meeting in Uganda to share information with our counterparts from Uganda and Rwanda. I will tell you how that goes when we get back.

14 responses so far

Apr 14 2008

A summary on progress

Published by admin under Uncategorized

I’ve just been in touch with Diddy, who has summarised the outcome of their efforts since last November, when the Makala Campaign began.

The Makala Campaign is the sustained effort to prevent the destruction of the gorilla’s habitat for charcoal, and which is considered to be the single most important threat to the future of the Mountain Gorillas in Virunga.

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There has been a non-stop watch at Kibati with regular patrols on the eastern flanks of the Nyamulagira and Nyiragongo Volcanoes and Kibumba, in the gorilla sector. Forest destruction for charcoal in these, the most critical sites in the park, have been reduced by two thirds.  In the past tens years, since the war started, we have never achieved such results, so there is quite a sense of encouragement among the rangers.

The patrols have been interesting as well.  On Nyiragongo, the big active volcano to the north of Goma, rangers of the Advance Force, and gorilla rangers from Rumangabo joined forces with the Monuc Indian batallian in January and effectively displaced the FDLR rebels from this part of the park.  For those that are not familiar with the various Rebel factions in Congo, the FDLR are the militias that formed out the Interahamwe, the Rwandan militias that perpetrated the Genocide in Rwanda in 1994.  Not a nice group of individuals.  Unfortunately they are camped out in the forests of eastern Congo, and are a major threat to the ongoing work of the rangers.  The FDLR are also heavily involved in illegal activities including illegal logging for charcoal.  For now, the rangers have the upper hand in this area, but it’s a constant struggle, with occasional armed contacts between militias and government rangers.

The Makala road blocks have been difficult to manage, with trucks trying to force their way through the roadblock at night and at high speed.  But they have been very succussful in reducing charcoal.  These are the registered results so far:

November 07:  5o sacs seized and 3 kilns destroyed

December 07: 102 sacs seized and 180 kilns destroyed

January 08: 413 sacs seized and 37 kilns destroyed

February 08: 296 sacs seized and 53 kilns destroyed

March 08:  385 sacs seized and 7 kilns destroyed

First  two weeks of April 08: 499 sacs seized adn 17 kilns destroyed.

This makes a total of  1745 sacs, or about 80 tons of charcoal seized since the beginning of the campaign.  This charcoal is distributed among the people who have been displaced by the war and are living in camps around Goma.
Unfortunately, many people make money from charcoal and it is a constant battle at a political level to explain the sense of what is happening.  On 20th March, the Provincial minister for the Environment was formally requested to explain the actions of the rangers to the Provincial Assembly (this was documented on the ending charcoal blog).  Last week she defended our position in parliament, and the vote was carried in our favour, which is a big relief, and give us the legal basis to continue the difficult work that lies ahead.

So the legal institutions in Congo, so often criticized in the international media, have played their role very effectively, and maintained the integrity that we had hoped for.  This also applies to the arrest of the suspects considered to be behind the Rugendo Massacre last year.  For my part, I never believed that we would get this far.  But the suspected ringleader has been arrested, and five accomplices were heard at the military tribunal of Goma last week.  That they started at the top on this difficult trial, rather than just finding a couple of small scapegoats, is very much to the credit  of the Congolese judicial system.

In the Mikeno, around bukima, it remains very difficult.  We tried working with a team of villagers to get information on the gorillas.  This worked for a while, but we have since suspended activities because of the risks involved for the villagers going in.  That said, the little information that we have suggests that the mountain gorillas have not suffered, and that there may have been three births, which is pretty miraculous.

All in all, the situation is as difficult a ever, but we are hopeful that we are in a good position to buy time for the gorillas, until this conflict is over.  It means constant support for the rangers so that they don’t lose their morale and continue their incredible efforts.

Emmanuel

19 responses so far

Apr 05 2008

Villager missing for a week

Published by admin under Community

This is Balemba. We’re quite worried. A villager from Rumangabo, where we live, has been missing since last Monday. He went up to Bukima, on the edge of the Gorilla Sector, to cultivate his crops, and has not been seen since. It’s about a four hour walk from Rumangabo to Bukima, and many of the villagers who fled Bukima when the fighting started had started doing the long walk back to their fields every day to tend their crops. They sleep in the valley, because the rebel territory is considered too dangerous.

However, since last weekend nobody has been going back to Bukima. Befor this incident, the FARDC (the National Army) troops caught two rebels who were in government controlled area where we are. The FARDC officers told all the villagers not to go back to Bukima to cultivate incase of retalliations by the rebels. Unfortunately this one villager did not get the message and went anyway. We’re trying to get all the information we can but it’s very difficult.

There have been many cases of villagers going missing in the rebel held area over the past six months, and never being seen again. It’s terrible, because the villagers have nothing to do with this terrible war, they are only the victims. They have to cultivate their crops to survive, but take huge risks in going behind enemy lines. We will start to report on these disappearances, because it is one of those things that nobody hears about.

16 responses so far

Apr 04 2008

Poison seized near Gorilla Sector

Published by admin under Rangers, Threats

This is Diddy. The last few weeks have been very difficult, with more pressure than ever being placed on those of us who are based in the park, trying to prevent the forest destruction.

Inspite of the difficulties we have had quite a lot of success, with charcoal supply being reduced to about a third of what it was. Also our rangers are now very present in the park, and regularly make arrests of poachers and teams going in to clear the forest. Three days ago, one of our patrols seized a group of poachers with snares and poison.

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Poison seized from poachers in the Nyamulagira Sector

The impact of poison on wildlife can be devestating, and we are very concerned about its increased use near the gorilla sector. Again, one incident could destroy a whole family of mountains gorillas, and so we have to be incredibly careful. Snares have also had a terrible impact on our gorillas. You will remember Karema, who was killed at the beginning of last year, had also lost his hand to a snare when he was a young juvenile black back.

A second troop of 15 rangers of the Advance Force has been deployed in our area. They are here to strengthen the existing patrols and road blocks. We have also been carrying training with the rangers, to continuously build up their skills and update them on new techniques. Yesterday we trained them in using GPS. We have been donated a GPS by Andrew C, in Colorado, which will be extremely useful in the remoter parts of the park.

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GPS training

7 responses so far