Gorillas at risk due to the conflict

GOMA, Congo, Nov 10 (Reuters) - East Congo’s conflict has put more than a quarter of the world’s last mountain gorillas at the mercy of armed groups who hunt and camp in their territory, park officials said on Monday.

With no rangers left to protect or care for them, the gorillas face even greater risk of extinction, they said.

Recent fighting between Tutsi rebels and the government army and its militia allies has displaced hundreds of thousands of people in Democratic Republic of Congo’s North Kivu province, home to the Virunga Park, Africa’s oldest national park. It has also eliminated all protection and effective conservation monitoring for 200 of the last remaining 700 mountain gorillas in the world, who live in the forested hills of Virunga, on the border with Uganda and Rwanda.

Virunga’s Gorilla Sector has been in the hands of rebel General Laurent Nkunda’s fighters since September 2007 and the Rumangabo park headquarters, from which conservation operations were run, fell to a rebel assault in October this year.

More than 50 wildlife rangers, who had spent years protecting the gorillas and other animals in Virunga, were forced to run for their lives, joining 200,000 other refugees sheltering around the North Kivu provincial capital Goma.

“It’s not possible now to have any news about the gorillas,” one displaced Virunga park ranger, Diddy Mwanaka, told Reuters.

“We don’t know about their health, their security or if they remain in a secure place or not,” he said, speaking at a makeshift camp housing refugee rangers and their families.

The park’s website, www.gorilla.cd, chronicles the Oct. 26 capture of the park’s HQ by the rebels and its consequences.

Samantha Newport, communications director of the Virunga National Park, said park authorities were extremely concerned that the unprotected mountain gorilla families, or solitary gorillas, could now be caught up in the crossfire of combat.

“No one is looking after them in any way, shape or form,” she said. At least 40 percent of the Virunga Park was no longer under the control of the Congolese Wildlife Authority (ICCN).

Newport said that while park authorities did not believe that gorillas were being singled out for killing, they and other animals such as elephants, hippos and antelopes faced threats from armed groups, poachers, land invaders and charcoal burners who destroyed their forest habitat.

POACHING

“All these rebel groups, from whatever side, use the park to train, to camp out, to rest and to eat,” she said.

“We have problems of poaching of elephants, hippos, buffalo and antelope, just to name a few as a result of the presence of these armed groups in the park,” Newport added, saying 40 elephants had been poached in Virunga this year alone.

Over the years, east Congo’s conflict, which has persisted despite the formal end of a 1998-2003 war in the vast, former Belgian colony, has taken its toll on both the gorillas and the ICCN rangers who protect them.

More than 150 rangers have been killed in the last decade protecting parks in east Congo.

Virunga’s Gorilla Sector suffered repeated attacks in 2007 during which 10 mountain gorillas were killed.

Newport said Nkunda’s rebels saw the south of the border park as strategic territory. They used it as a supply route.

“At the moment, there is no chance of going back to the gorilla sector… When you have such a vulnerable, critically endangered population of animals, you really need to keep track of what is going on,” she added.

Newport said that unlike other endangered species, mountain gorillas had never managed to reproduce in captivity.

“So the ones we have in the wild, that’s it, when they’re gone, that’s it, they’ve gone,” she said.

Meanwhile two independent news sources have said the rebels continue to make progress and, as of Wednesday night, CNDP rebels had advanced to about 10 kilometres south of Kanyabayonga, the town looted by government troops earlier this week which is around 175 kilometres (110 miles) north of the Nord-Kivu capital Goma.

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6 Comments

  1. Annie
    Posted November 13, 2008 at 9:44 pm | Permalink

    I am so distraught about this and feel helpless… I can’t even imagine how all the people and rangers feel……please be careful and maybe there will be some light at the end of this by some miracle…………take care!

  2. Megan
    Posted November 13, 2008 at 9:44 pm | Permalink

    I feel so helpless! I don’t know what to do. What can we do??? I have donated what I can but I don’t have much money. Is there anything else I can do???? My knuckles are white from praying so hard.

  3. Tony
    Posted November 14, 2008 at 2:18 am | Permalink

    The problem has always been that the park is such a large area and 50 rangers was never going to be enough to defend it. All it takes is for poachers to take out a few gorillas a year and they are already on the road to extinction. It is going to require more resources and the use of technology to defend the area in the long term. But the current problem is how to end the conflict. The wounds of the 1994 massacre have not healed and this conflict will continue to build resentment between the warring factions. Why has the UN been slow to react to this crisis? I wonder also whether the new president elect will have something in his heart that tells him that a US aided intervention is sorely needed. Or will he be so focused on the war on terror and the credit crunch that African issues will have to take a back seat. If Obama cannot see that this conflict needs to be resolved, then I can’t see any other political leaders pushing for action. However, Prince Charles has been good at raising environmental issues and getting international attention, I hope he has been following this crisis and will urge an international effort. Ultimately, a high powered rapid response military strike force is going to be needed along with improved communications. But to get there we need to convince the world’s leaders and get their attention.
    If they could place just a fraction of their resources that went into Iraq, we could see an end to this conflict.

  4. Theresa
    Posted November 14, 2008 at 1:20 pm | Permalink

    I can’t begin to imagine how horrible this conflict is for all involved. These people and the gorillas desperately need a miracle.

  5. Annie
    Posted November 17, 2008 at 7:58 pm | Permalink

    same news? So worried……..

  6. Tony Raizis
    Posted November 18, 2008 at 5:50 am | Permalink

    There have been reports on the BBC web site of daily progress in high level talks involving the Congolese government. These sound promising as they give the impression that compromise is in the air. While I think they could mark a turning point in the conflict, I am concerned that after the smoke has cleared and the humanitarian crisis is averted, Virunga park will return to being guarded by 50 rangers. This is not going to be enough to protect the park when there are so many poachers, and such a large area to protect.

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