BBC Wildlife Magazine

Meet the scientist

This grassroots activist led his community to establish Myanmar’s Salween Peace Park, a 5,485km² conservati­on zone that’s protecting land and life.

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Paul Sein Twa is working with community groups in Myanmar

The gibbon is the forest’s best entertaine­r, so killing it would be like killing a rock singer.

In 2015, Myanmar’s 70-year armed political conflict was replaced by a brittle ceasefire agreement and tensions remain between the government and the Karen people. Anyone protecting the environmen­t has their work cut out for them, but to do so under these circumstan­ces takes remarkable resilience. For Paul Sein Twa, whose work has recently been recognised with a Goldman Environmen­tal Prize, his strength comes from firm footings in the land.

As a child, he remembers travelling on the Salween River, spotting barking deer, peacocks and wild pigs from the boat – sometimes even gibbons swinging past. “In those undisturbe­d days, before the loggers came, our culture forbade hunting tigers, gibbons and many other species because of their interrelat­ionships with humans as described in our old stories,” he explains. “The gibbon is the forest’s best entertaine­r, so killing it would be like killing a rock singer.”

While the Karen people’s traditions have the highest regard for nature, others valued the teak forests for timber, and intensive logging activity brought widespread destructio­n. As a teenager, Sein Twa witnessed floods and landslides with no forest to hold back the devastatio­n. When he learned the government planned to build a cascade of hydropower dams on the river, he was motivated to protect what he loved.

In 2001, he co-founded the Karen Environmen­tal and Social Action Network (KESAN) and soon began facilitati­ng a community-led approach to preserve the land. The concept of a Peace Park, a zone dedicated to building peace through the conservati­on of biodiversi­ty and culture, seemed an ideal fit for the Salween River Basin. The area’s long isolation due to conflict at least held back developers, and as a result the region has some of the last remaining intact wilderness in mainland South-East Asia.

To safeguard the area, Sein Twa and his team got to know it inside out. They used GPS to map Karen territorie­s and camera-traps to survey wildlife. “We, and foreign conservati­onists we’ve been working with, have been amazed to find Critically Endangered species present that even our own communitie­s didn’t know about, or thought wouldn’t have survived the long war, logging and other threats,” he says, enthusing about tigers, Indochines­e leopards and Chinese pangolins putting in appearance­s.

The Peace Park was officially declared by the Karen people in 2018 and Sein Twa continues his work with community groups to re-establish customs that connect them with the land. Ella Davies

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 ??  ?? Paul Sein Twa (left) works with community groups to protect nature. Below: Chinese pangolin.
Paul Sein Twa (left) works with community groups to protect nature. Below: Chinese pangolin.
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