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The lion killing fields of Tarangire and Lake Manyara National Parks in Tanzania
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Wow! Is this a feeble attempt by LionAid to throw the world renown African Wildlife Foundation (AWF) under the bus? Shame on you LionAid!!!!!! shame

Perhaps y'all (LionAid) could enlighten us regarding Kenya's ongoing and outstanding wildlife conservation initiatives rather than focusing on Tanzania? Roll Eyes

Excerpt from LionAid website (dated December 2, 2016):

"What a mess. Well over 240 lions killed in 12 years? A failed wildlife migration corridor programme that includes an international wildlife conservation organization operating a cattle ranch in the middle of the corridor? A scientific study that shows local communities benefiting nothing from national park income, or being able to benefit from trophy hunting concessions or tourism ventures?"

For those that aren't familiar with the world renown wildlife conservation organization, the following was excerpted from their website:

AWF Named a Top Charity by CharityWatch

African Wildlife Foundation (AWF) is proud to announce it has been included in CharityWatch’s list of top-rated charities.

The listing affirms AWF’s status as a reputable and highly efficient conservation organization. To obtain a top rating, a charity must spend 75 percent or more of its budget on its programs, using no more than $25 to raise $100 in public support, and earn “open-book” status for disclosure of basic financial information by CharityWatch, among other things.

For more than two decades, CharityWatch has been an independent charity watchdog in the United States.

“Inclusion on the Top-Rated Charities list is a testament to AWF’s commitment to accountability, transparency and sound fiscal management,” says Craig Sholley, senior vice president for AWF. “Our supporters have always known that, by donating to AWF, they are ensuring their dollars go where it matters most—to conservation efforts on the ground in Africa. This recognition by CharityWatch is a welcome affirmation of the faith donors put in us to make a lasting impact.”

***
Excerpted from LionAid website:

The lion killing fields of Tarangire and Lake Manyara National Parks in Tanzania

Findings by the Tarangire Lion Project show a total of 226 lions killed between 2004-2013 in retaliation by neighbouring communities for the killing of livestock. In recent years, many more lions have been killed, and the worst mass killing was in 2009 when 26 lions were slaughtered by angry villagers, shaking Tanzania’s reputation as one of the remaining lion strongholds in the world. In 2015 and 2016 at least another seven lions have been killed.

These numbers of lions killed have not been widely recognized or acknowledged apart from local newspaper articles and perhaps a few obscure publications in scientific journals. LionAid reported on this situation in 2015.

This is nothing but a tale of bad land management, and government failure, and frustration by local people. These sorts of tales should be coming all too familiar to us as these situations are surely not being addressed with any urgency.


Lake Manyara National Park was gazetted in 1960. Only measuring 325km2, it is tiny. Nevertheless, the park gained international fame because of the “tree-climbing” lions, proximity to the international tourist entry point in Arusha, and also perhaps because the park is where Ian Douglas Hamilton began his elephant “research” in 1965. The park is located in the Arusha and Manyara Administrative Regions in Tanzania but the communities receive no income from the park. That all flows to the Tanzania National Parks Authority (TANAPA), a governmental organization with many critics, including the international media over, just as one example, attempting to deny the scale of the slaughter that has decimated Tanzania’s elephants over the past few years.

Tarangire National Park was gazetted in 1970. The park measures 2,850km2, about 8.8 times the size of Manyara. The two parks are only about 50km apart.

So would it not, in the wisdom of wildlife corridors these days, make sense to provide opportunities for wildlife to move from one to the other? It must be one of the shortest wildlife corridors between two National Parks?

But no.

There does exist a “corridor” between the two parks and it even has a name – the Kwakuchinja Wildlife Migration Corridor. Crucial to this “corridor” is the so called Manyara Ranch. A failed government cattle project, the ranch was taken over in 2001 by the African Wildlife Foundation and the Tanzania Land Conservation Trust to benefit the surrounding communities. Much has been written about this Manyara Ranch as a “success” story, but perhaps this initial enthusiasm needs to be re-evaluated.

The Manyara Ranch website says this:

“African Wildlife Foundation is our principle partner. It manages the ranch, conservation projects, community relations and other legal aspects related to Manyara Ranch not involving tourism. In addition to funds generated by visitors to Manyara Conservancy, donors provide some funding to AWF for the management of the project.”.

A tourism website has this to say:

“In addition to its importance as a corridor, Manyara Ranch offers exciting conservation outreach potential for showcasing how communities can benefit from wildlife conservation outside of protected areas. Set in a landscape experiencing rapid habitat degradation, the ranch serves as a laboratory to study the factors driving habitat degradation and human-wildlife conflicts. This research informs innovative and adaptive management approaches aimed at curtailing habitat degradation, conflict mitigation and habitat restoration. Approaches include diverse conservation financing mechanisms, combining both community and private initiatives. The process of identifying, planning, and managing income-generating activities is guided by the goal of developing a sustainable mechanism for both conservation and benefit sharing with local communities.”.

The Manyara Ranch even has an abattoir meeting international export standards as well as attempting to maintain “luxury tourist accommodations”?


A scientific paper entitled “Wildlife Induced Damage to Crops and Livestock Loss and how they Affect Human Attitudes in the Kwakuchinja Wildlife Corridor in Northern Tanzania” by Kwaslema Malle Hariohay and Eivin Røskaft published in Environment and Natural Resources Research; Vol. 5, No. 3; 2015 had this to say:

“Wildlife induced damage to crops and livestock is jeopardising people’s life near the borders of protected areas while human encroaches boundaries of Tarangire National Park... there were negative interactions between wildlife and local communities, there was increased livestock depredations and crop damage and the wildlife induced-damage was greater in the border of TNP… households close to the boundary of the National Park incurred greater losses from crop and livestock depredation. The negative interactions between wild animals and the losses they incur from depredations and crop damage interviewed respondents had negative attitude toward wild animals. Developing ways of enabling farmers to benefit from the existence of protected areas could be a possible way forward but in the case of the TNP, benefits from outreach activities are currently inadequate to offset costs associated with wildlife, and poor track record of revenues from tourist reaching local farmers. Experience from community-based conservation projects show that distribution of benefits can be problematic and does not necessarily improve conservation. “

Read that again. Revenues from tourists do not reach communities, the local attitude to wildlife is overwhelmingly negative, and community-based conservation projects are failing to distribute benefits.

Also, a Tarangire project established by the organization Lion Guardians in the area in2013 seems to have been terminated.

Neither does trophy hunting in the area seem to have benefited local communities or changed attitudes. Trophy hunters shoot about 15 lions per annum in concessions bordering Tarangire, but income from such activities does not convince local communities to take a less aggressive stance to those predators (hyenas mostly) which prey on livestock.

Of course, Tanzania has no government compensation scheme for farmers or pastoralists who lose crops or livestock to wildlife. This is despite the tourism sector being responsible for $4.5billion to the economy in 2013 – accounting for 14% of Tanzania’s GDP and employing 11% of the workforce. One would have thought Tanzania would be as careful of her wildlife as Botswana is?

What a mess. Well over 240 lions killed in 12 years? A failed wildlife migration corridor programme that includes an international wildlife conservation organization operating a cattle ranch in the middle of the corridor? A scientific study that shows local communities benefiting nothing from national park income, or being able to benefit from trophy hunting concessions or tourism ventures?

No wonder Tanzania is being looked at askance these days. 70,000 elephants poached in five years without a mutter from the government while it was going on. Lions killed all over the place without turning a wildlife department hair. Hunting concessions awarded to Middle Eastern companies resulting in revealed excesses. A highway across the Serengeti receiving renewed government interest.

Tanzania does not need this negative image while attempting to portray herself as a “wildlife-friendly” tourism destination. With many competitors for the wildlife tourism dollar Tanzania should either polish their tarnished wildlife conservation image soonest or risk losing significant income in the future. And it is good to see that newly-elected President Magufuli is taking remedial steps.

***


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Lying Aid.

A small underfunded charity that has done absolutely nothing towards the protection of Lion in Africa.


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Apparently LionAid is attempting to establish a presence here in the USA. Mo' donations. Cha-Ching!

***
LionAid News dated June 21, 2016:

How the deck has been stacked to allow another Florida Black Bear trophy hunt in 2016

A few days ago, we were invited by Adam and Wendy Sugalski, prominent Florida Black Bear defenders, to travel to Jacksonville, Florida to lend support against the planned 2016 bear trophy hunt. The previous hunt in 2015 was an unmitigated conservation disaster as it was based on poor scientific information, was a poorly regulated exercise, has not been adequately evaluated to determine any consequence and was driven by vested interest groups with close connections to the Florida Fish and Wildlife “Conservation” Commission (FWC).

Please read my earlier blog on this issue.

And please read this follow-up blog in entirety. LionAid has been dealing with trophy hunting issues for many years, and while we might not have known much about Florida Black Bear trophy hunting in the past, we found ourselves on very familiar territory. Trophy hunting of species around the world is driven by special interest groups, ignores public opinion in favour of those who can influence politics via insider connections, is a scientifically poor but vested interest rich activity and is supported by corrupt practices.

***

LionAid News dated September 29, 2016:

A big thank you to Emerald City Pet Rescue

LionAid would like to thank all the wonderful people involved in the organization and realization of the Seattle Global March for Elephants, Rhinos and Lions on 24th September. This was surely of the best global marches, complete with a huge turnout, dancing lions, a marching band, lots signs and banners and of course the wonderful atmosphere of the lovely city of Seattle! We would especially like to thank all the good people at Emerald City Pet Rescue for all their hard work before, during and after the march and for the wonderful reception afforded to us at LionAid. Special thanks must go to Vivian Goldbloom who did so much and more to make the Seattle march a wonderful success. On a personal note we would also like to thank Molly, Nick , Vanessa, Cindy and Joan for taking us under their wing while we were in Seattle.

Thank you too to the kind people who videoed our speeches on the day. For those of you who would like to hear the speeches, here they are:

Chris Macsween speech Part 1

Chris Macsween speech Part 2

Dr Pieter Kat speech Part 1

Dr Pieter Kat speech Part 2

***


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Originally posted by fairgame:
Lying Aid.

A small underfunded charity that has done absolutely nothing towards the protection of Lion in Africa.



The crooks who run lying aid are nothing but crooks.

They have done absolutely NOTHING to lions.


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Lion Lives Matter. And screw everything else.
 
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Ouch! Apparently someone got their feelings hurt and is feeling a little disenfranchised lately.

Is this a feeble attempt by LionAid to throw Minister Rory Stewart under the bus? Cool

***
LionAid website (December 7, 2016)

Lion trophy hunting can conserve lions?

So says a report delivered to the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) by David Macdonald and his co-workers at Oxford University’s Wildlife Conservation Research Unit (WildCRU). The report was commissioned by former DEFRA Minister Rory Stewart after an Adjournment Debate in Parliament requested by LionAid and delivered by David Jones MP in November 2015. After the debate, LionAid met twice with Minister Stewart. We suggested that the UK take two important steps:

1. Ban the import of all lion trophies into the UK as lion trophy hunting served no purpose in conservation of the species, and indeed that all available evidence from a diversity of scientific reports using data from Zambia, Zimbabwe, Tanzania Cameroon etc indicated clearly that lion trophy hunting was responsible for further population declines of a species already experiencing a frightening decline from other mortality factors. We asked Minister Stewart to consider aligning UK policy with those of the USA, France, the Netherlands and Australia;
2. Provide specific funding to ensure stabilization of the few remaining large and future viable lion populations in Africa.

During our second meeting, Minister Stewart told us that we had “won”, but wanted to determine the outcome of the CITES Conference and to determine whether the UK could make additive positive progress by enlisting other EU nations to join with the UK.

Of course, other events took place in the meantime – the UK public voted to leave the EU, Prime Minister David Cameron was replaced by Prime Minister Theresa May, and Rory Stewart was re-shuffled to the Department for International Development.

But before he left DEFRA, Rory Stewart had commissioned David Macdonald to prepare his report.

LionAid participated in a “stakeholder meeting” with Macdonald to present our views on lion trophy hunting. We requested, based on the fact that LionAid was crucially involved in important aspects of the process, that we could see a draft version of the report before it was officially presented to DEFRA, and thereby be afforded further input. This is rather standard practice, but the request was denied.


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Posts: 2021 | Location: Republic of Texico | Registered: 20 June 2012Reply With Quote
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Fuck me just who does Lying Aid think they are?

Never have I seen such false truths and Lion Aid contributes zero to conservation in Africa.


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It's amazing that so many people follow this utterly useles group..
 
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