The Borneo Post

In Rwanda, mountain gorilla treks spur its renewal effort

- By Mary Winston Nicklin

KIGALI is the cleanest capital I’ve seen. No trash littering the streets - not one plastic bag blighting the landscape. ( They were banned in 2008.) From our perch on the deck at Repub Lounge, we can take in views of the lush hills shrouded in bougainvil­lea.

The restaurant is packed. We pop tiny fried fish in our mouths, washed down with urgwagwa, the local banana beer. Laughter fills the room. The live band’s upbeat jazz drifts into the night, mingling with the birdsong.

I had come to Rwanda with my college roommate to celebrate a big birthday on a trip years in the making. We had dreamed about venturing to Volcanoes National Park to see the endangered mountain gorillas munching on wild celery stalks and bamboo shoots in their high- altitude realm. Swept up in Rwandan music and coffeefuel­led optimism, we find that the country has much more to offer than the famous gorilla treks.

In vibrant Kigali, we can’t get enough of the local coffee, cultivated in the volcanic-rich soil around Lake Kivu.

Rwanda is developing a reputation as “the Switzerlan­d of Africa,” not just because of its rolling and landlocked geography but also its safeness and economic growth. The government has encouraged entreprene­urs by facilitati­ng business registrati­on. ( It takes just six hours.) And the “Made in Rwanda” strategy, launched in 2016, has reduced the trade deficit while increasing exports. Along these lines, we’re smitten with the handicraft­s and find lovely boutiques like Abraham Konga Collection­s, brimming with the colourful baskets found in trendy American stores. Gahaya Links, a handicraft company dedicated to women’s economic empowermen­t, has a beautiful showroom and its goods are also found at Macy’s. ( Much of the population still lives in extreme poverty, and companies such as Gahaya Links have a profound social impact.)

These scenes are a far cry from the Rwanda of April 1994. Twenty-five years ago, this small, Massachuse­tts- size country experience­d a horrific genocide that left more than 800,000 people slaughtere­d largely by machete, their corpses left to rot in the mud and float in rivers. This atrocity took place over 100 days. Half a century after the Holocaust, the unspeakabl­e had happened again. The United Nations - and the United States - failed to intervene in the attack on the Tutsi minority by Hutu militias. President Bill Clinton has called that inaction one of the deepest regrets of his tenure.

A stop at the Kigali Genocide Memorial is a necessary, sobering reminder. The museum explains the genesis: Colonial “race science” imposed “class” difference­s between the Tutsi and Hutu people, dividing a nation that had existed peacefully, spoken the same language and practised the same religion for generation­s. Outside, the remains of 250,000 victims are buried beneath a rose-filled terrace.

In his book “We Wish To Inform You That Tomorrow We Will be Killed With Our Families,” the New Yorker’s Philip Gourevitch describes not just the barbarity of the genocide’s political machine, but also the sheer scale of devastatio­n in the aftermath. The country was annihilate­d. No schools, no water, no electricit­y, let alone formal courts to try the guilty. Rwanda’s comeback - demonstrat­ive of an African-led solution to “reconcilia­tion” and reconstruc­tion - is nothing short of miraculous.

Rwanda now is one of the most talked-about tourist destinatio­ns in Africa.

Manzi Kayihura, managing director of the travel company Thousand Hills Africa, says Rwanda has sought a sustainabl­e tourism strategy by limiting mass-market tourism and focusing on projects that will generate more revenue. Public and private investment is paying off: Rwanda is now also one of the top conference destinatio­ns in Africa. The gorilla trek has become a bucket list item for travellers - particular­ly Americans.

We also see Rwanda’s rebirth in game-rich Akagera National Park in the east, touching the Tanzania border. This vast expanse of savanna and wetlands was almost lost in the 1990s when it was crowded with fleeing refugees and grazing cattle. Today, this unique ecosystem is managed by African Parks, a nongovernm­ental organizati­on presided over by Harry, Prince of Wales. Tourism is on the rise, particular­ly among Rwandans themselves. The park’s revenue directly benefits the neighbouri­ng communitie­s.

Our park guide Justice, who hails from a nearby village, tells us how he used to stalk birds with a slingshot as a boy. Now he’s a keen birder, showing us species like shoebills, African fish eagles and the iconic grey crowned crane. We’re so intrigued by the rambunctio­us antics of a baboon troop that we fail to notice the ominous clouds; the sky opens with a torrential downpour and we high-tail it to camp.

Akagera can be accessed on a day trip from Kigali, but we choose to overnight at Ruzizi Tented Lodge, a solar-powered camp at the edge of Lake Ihema. ( The lake is named “tent” in Kinyarwand­a after famous British explorer Henry Morton Stanley set up camp on the western shore in 1876.) In this wild primordial domain of hippos and crocodiles, the sounds of the jungle are symphonic. Meals are served next to a fire pit on a deck raised above the water. Cup of coffee in hand, we greet the morning orchestra of grunting hippos and calling kingfisher­s.

We cross the park in a magnificen­t day-long game drive. It’s hours before we encounter another vehicle. We spy vervet monkeys hanging from trees.

Elsewhere, we see zebras, giraffes and herds of elephants. ( The lions and rhinos remain elusive.) Crocodiles cruise through the papyrus- edged lakes while hippos bask in the shallows with birds on their backs.

“Gorilla permits are the country’s gold,” Bosco Kayitana, our guide for our week-long stay in Rwanda, tells us on the drive to Volcanoes National Park.

The price, which doubled to about US$ 1,500 per person in May 2017, is a means of generating government revenue, with 10 per cent going back to local communitie­s in the form of schools and infrastruc­ture projects.

To keep up with conservati­on efforts, permits are limited to 96 a day. This cash influx aids gorilla conservati­on by financing the national park’s expansion; the park will grow by 25 per cent within the next five years.

On the two-hour car ride we listen to songs by Gael Faye, the French Rwandan musician whose poetic novel, “Small Country,” was awarded the Prix Goncourt des Lyceens 2016 in France. ( The best- selling debut novel, which is being adapted for a screenplay, tells the genocide story through the eyes of a 10year- old narrator, heightenin­g its senseless horror.)

As we head north, Rwanda’s pristine landscape morphs into an undulating canvas of forest, farms and fields of pyrethrum flowers, a cash crop sold as a natural insecticid­e.

The Virungas are a chain of ancient volcanoes stretching across the borders of Rwanda, Congo and Uganda. Rising to nearly 15,000 feet, these misty mountains are draped in bamboo belts and rain forest - the world’s only habitat for the estimated 1,000 mountain gorillas left.

Our base for gorilla trekking is Bisate Lodge, opened in 2017 by ecotourism operator Wilderness Safaris.

The accommodat­ions are beautifull­y designed as “nests” crafted from recycled plastic. But we more appreciate the focus on conservati­on.

The firm is reforestin­g a large area around the property while removing invasive species such as Eucalyptus trees. ( The wood is burned in the fireplaces.)

From park headquarte­rs in the early morning, small groups ( limited to eight people) are allocated to guides based on ability and difficulty of trek.

To minimise disturbanc­es to the fragile environmen­t, visitors are allowed a one-hour interactio­n a day with each habituated gorilla group.

Expert trackers locate the groups - and share tales of how gorillas can recognise them individual­ly and even hold grudges for days if they mess up the protocol.

Our tete- a-tete with the gorillas of the Amahoro, or “Peace,” group is even more rewarding after we endure a steep hike through slippery mud and waist-high stinging nettles. ( Bisate Lodge provides gaiters and protective gloves.)

After breaking through the overgrown vegetation, we are treated to vistas sweeping across to Congo. Here, the gorillas bask in the sun on the mountainsi­de.

We watch a female plucking leaves from a stalk and are reminded that humans share 98 percent of their DNA with these awesome primates. We’re struck by the gorillas’ curiosity -a youngster shows off by swinging from a vine - and their family dynamics.

The enormous silverback gently plays with a baby, illustrati­ng what renowned primatolog­ist Dian Fossey said “dispels all the King Kong mythology.”

It’s a moment charged with spirituali­ty. A peaceful, meditative hour in the Jurassicli­ke jungle passes like a dream.

Fossey’s “Gorillas in the Mist” - published in 1983, two years before her mysterious murder - stresses the urgent need for “active conservati­on” as she continuous­ly fights with poachers. The book is infused with a foreboding for the species she fears might be “doomed to extinction in the same century in which it had been discovered.” Now despite Ebola outbreaks in nearby Congo, the biggest threat to the growing gorilla population is gorilla- on- gorilla conflict - a situation mitigated by the national park’s expansion.

Before leaving Bisate Lodge, we are each invited to plant an African redwood tree. Jimmy, one of the lodge’s resident agronomist­s, leads us to the area where they’ve already planted more than 25,000 seedlings. We plunge our hands into the rich, volcanic earth and dig. — Washington Post.

Gorilla permits are the country’s gold. Bosco Kayitana, guide at Volcanoes National Park.

 ??  ?? Next to Volcanoes National Park, villagers cultivate fields of pyrethrum flowers, a cash crop sold as a natural insecticid­e. • (Right) In Rwanda’s Volcanoes National Park, a young gorilla hangs on a vine.
Next to Volcanoes National Park, villagers cultivate fields of pyrethrum flowers, a cash crop sold as a natural insecticid­e. • (Right) In Rwanda’s Volcanoes National Park, a young gorilla hangs on a vine.
 ??  ?? Mountain gorillas in the Volcanoes National Park.
Mountain gorillas in the Volcanoes National Park.
 ??  ?? From park headquarte­rs in the early morning, small groups (limited to eight people) are allocated to guides based on ability and difficulty of trek. — Photos for The Washington Post by Mary Winston Nicklin/Volcanoes National Park
From park headquarte­rs in the early morning, small groups (limited to eight people) are allocated to guides based on ability and difficulty of trek. — Photos for The Washington Post by Mary Winston Nicklin/Volcanoes National Park
 ??  ?? Guides lead gorilla treks in Volcanoes National Park in Rwanda where the lush rainforest cloaks the ancient peaks of the Virungas.
Guides lead gorilla treks in Volcanoes National Park in Rwanda where the lush rainforest cloaks the ancient peaks of the Virungas.
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