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Ethiopian wildlife at risk as forest cut
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Ethiopian wildlife at risk as forest cut
By Tsegaye Tadesse

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - A thousand rare black-mane lions -- an Ethiopian national symbol -- and some 300 elephants are in danger after a swathe of forest in their sanctuary was cut down, a wildlife expert said on Thursday.

The land was cleared from a conservation area at Midiga Tola, adjacent to the Babile Elephant Sanctuary located 560 km (350 miles) east of Addis Ababa, Ethiopian Wildlife Association President Yirmed Demeke said.

Flora EcoPower Holding, a German biodiesel producer based in Munich, cleared the forest after it was granted 10,000 hectares of land by the government, Yirmed said.

"The company has continued to clear the forested land without any concern for the wild animals threatened by the destruction of an internationally recognised conservation area," Yirmed said.

Flora EcoPower's Chief Operations Officer for Ethiopia Alon Hovev said the company had met wildlife experts and government officials over the past few days to solve the problem.

"We are not touching one area where there are elephants," said Hovev, saying their work was 30 km from the elephants.

Hovev said the problem arose from a lack of communication between the company and conservation groups, but said it was resolved at the meetings.

"No one can tell us we are not taking care of animals. Anything they will tell us to do, we will do and we will contribute money," he said on Thursday.

Wildlife experts visiting the forest protested against the regional and federal governments, saying the company had not conducted the legally required environmental impact assessment before cutting the forest down.

Tadesse Hailu, head of the Ministry of Agriculture's Wildlife Protection Department, said local authorities must make sure investment did not harm conservation areas, wildlife or the environment.

The 7,000 sq km (4,350 sq mile) sanctuary is one of a kind in Ethiopia, and home to about 300 elephants, 1,000 black-mane lions and 250 bird and plant species endemic to the Horn of Africa nation.

The black-mane lions are revered in Ethiopia, where they are on the national currency and often depicted in statues.

Scores of the black-maned lions are kept in a zoo in the capital Addis Ababa. Wildlife experts estimate that only about 1,000 remain in the wild.

(Additional reporting by Bryson Hull in Nairobi)


Kathi

kathi@wildtravel.net
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"The world is a book, and those who do not travel read only one page."
 
Posts: 9571 | Location: Chicago | Registered: 23 July 2003Reply With Quote
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I'm all for the conservation of species and these black maned lions in particular but this article reeks of the typical ENGO strategy of gross exaggeration, lack of facts, no context, weak linkages, etc, etc, etc.

It seems we have 1000 lions living in a reserve that is 700,000 ha's in size.

Adjacent to this reserve, a company allegedly logs 10,000 ha's. Granted, this is a pretty big area if it was completely denuded of trees, but I highly doubt that was the case.

Anyway, I am not sure exactly how the logging next to the huge reserve is putting ALL of the lions and elephants inside the reserve in some kind of jeopardy?

I'd need a lot more convincing before I'd condemn the acts of the Ethiopian government or the company involved.

My 2c,
Canuck



 
Posts: 7123 | Location: The Rock (southern V.I.) | Registered: 27 February 2001Reply With Quote
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