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South Sudan wildlife needs millions 2011-01-18 18:24 Juba - South Sudan appealed for investors to plough $140m into its war-hit wildlife parks, seeking to kick-start a tourism industry and wean itself off oil months ahead of its expected independence. The south has the world's second largest migration of mammals, untamed wildernesses and vast herds of gazelles and antelopes, rivalling anything seen in Kenya, Uganda and other African holiday hotspots, say experts. But populations of elephants, hippos and other fleshier animals have plummeted after hungry militia fighters hunted them for their meat and forced them to take shelter in dense forests. The region has next to no tourists, largely thanks to the long war, poor security and almost total lack of infrastructure - there are only 60km of paved roads in a territory around the size of France. "We feel that as we are coming out of unity with Khartoum we want to create another source of income other than oil," Daniel Wani, under secretary for wildlife at the south's Ministry of Wildlife, Conservation and Tourism, told Reuters. "The potential of tourism can encourage people to come." South Sudan, with 98% of its budget coming from oil revenues, is expected to split away from the north in July after early results showed an overwhelming vote for separation in an independence referendum, held last week. Private investment The vote was promised in a 2005 peace deal that ended decades of civil war with the north. Wani estimated south Sudan would need $140m to revamp parks over the next five years, by building guard posts, roads, airstrips, hotels and a new communications network. "We are starting off with a very minimal amount of investment and so the priority is to encourage the private sector to come in. If we invest as the government, it will be very heavy for us," he said. Experts say the potential is huge. "The fact they still have important populations of wildlife and vast intact habitats after 22 years of war means they have got the resources to work with," said Paul Elkan, south Sudan director for the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS). "They could over the next coming years really consolidate that into the next Serengeti attraction," he said referring to the wildlife-rich region stretching across Tanzania and Kenya. Kenya projected tourism earnings of a record $1.24bn for 2010. Former soldiers Populations of elephants had fallen to between 5 000 to 15 000, down from around 130 000 in the 1960s and 1970s in south Sudan, according to WCS data. Wani said the government had already recruited 16 000 former southern soldiers as wildlife guards, hoping to ward off poachers and secure parks. "It's very ambitious because it takes a country a long time to build a reputation," said Philip Winter from the Rift Valley Institute research group. "They need to start small and build up gradually. You start with a tented camp in Badingilo, bird watching on a boat on the Nile and hill walking in Imatong," he added, referring to places within reach of the southern capital Juba. "I don't see mass tourism there as it's too underdeveloped and it's going to be high cost ... South Sudan has to be a small but high quality product." - Reuters Kathi kathi@wildtravel.net 708-425-3552 "The world is a book, and those who do not travel read only one page." | ||
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Lets hope this works out and produces another great Safari destination. | |||
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Wani, the man quoted in the Reuters article, used to be at the Ministry of Tranport, and I know him well. He is panhandling the donor community and most of them wouldn't dare be caught funding something that promotes hunting. Someone familiar with Zimbabwe/Rhodesia's Campfire program and other community friendly hunting programs needs to be sent to brief him. Where is SCI's money when it's needed? _________________________________ AR, where the hopeless, hysterical hypochondriacs of history become the nattering nabobs of negativisim. | |||
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Hate to say it, but $140M isnt going to build much. Even with the inexpensive labor, that would be eaten up by logistics in short order. 30+ years experience tells me that perfection hit at .264. Others are adequate but anything before or after is wishful thinking. | |||
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What Sudan lacks is a zoning system akin to Tanzania's, with hunting blocks acting as buffer zones to Parks. To do this requires no building whatsoever, only the knowledge of how it works, hunting/wildlife experts who know how to draw the maps which take into account wildlife areas and concentrations, and then administrative will. Without the knowledge and the will, hunting will just be a poorly planned adjunct to protecting animals à la Kenya, which is where most of the present Southern Sudanese senior civil servants, including Wani, lived during the civil war years. They will get money from USAID, the WWF and others, and it won't include money to plan for sustainable hunting. _________________________________ AR, where the hopeless, hysterical hypochondriacs of history become the nattering nabobs of negativisim. | |||
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They need to follow a similar system of that of Niassa Reserve, Mozambique. A good system that is working well. They only have to deal with the problem of Human inhabitance within the Reserve. | |||
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I am not a wildlife or sustainable hunting expert, but I know more about it than Dr. Daniel Wani, Undersecretary of the Ministry of Tourism and Wildlife. Surely SCI has funds to allow Dr. Wani to visit systems in Africa that work, where he can be briefed about successful systems. Sudan may need its own system, without copying either Tanzania's or Mozambique's, but my guess is that right now it's not even part of the plan. _________________________________ AR, where the hopeless, hysterical hypochondriacs of history become the nattering nabobs of negativisim. | |||
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