The Citizen (KZN)

Pedalling past peril on 4 legs

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– Running into elephants or a pack of hyenas on the way to school is not an unusual experience for children living near a nature reserve in northwest Zimbabwe. And it can be dangerous.

Wild animals killed 50 people and injured 85 more in the country last year, and elephants are among the most dangerous.

In order to shorten the amount of time kids are exposed on the route to school, park authoritie­s have come up with an unconventi­onal solution: bicycles.

Joaquim Homela, 12, is one of about 100 children who received a new two-wheeler that allows him to set off later, and avoid the pre-dawn hours when animals are most active.

Until recently, he used to hurry on foot, accompanie­d by his grandmothe­r.

“Wild animals, particular­ly elephants as well as lions often roam around our villages,” said Siphiwe Moyo. “So we worry for our young ones.”

The bicycle project was concocted by the national parks authority, Zimparks, and the Internatio­nal Fund for Animal Welfare, a charity.

They hope it will tame tensions between the park and nearby farming communitie­s.

Deaths caused by wild animals in 2023 were down 26% on the previous year, but there are concerns the number might pick up again in 2024 as the tuskers move further afield in search of water because of a drought.

“If left unattended, human-wildlife conflict poses a serious threat to the well-being of the communitie­s and biodiversi­ty integrity of the greater Hwange ecosystem,” said Phillip Kuvawoga, IFAW landscape conservati­on director.

The group is also setting up “predator-proof” livestock enclosures in villages where donkeys and cattle are regularly mauled by big cats.

Such initiative­s help locals “appreciate the benefits of their wildlife heritage,” said ZimParks director, Fulton Mangwanya.

“Because the moment they don’t see value in wildlife, it will be decimated through poaching and the like,” he said.

With an estimated 100 000 animals, Zimbabwe has the second biggest elephant population in the world.

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