Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Conservati­onists protest Nigeria ‘superhighw­ay’

Road to harm people, wildlife, activists say

- By ANN M. SIMMONS

Pressure is mounting to stop constructi­on of a proposed six-lane highway through a Nigerian rainforest that is home to hundreds of thousands of people and vulnerable wildlife.

The road, locally referred to as a superhighw­ay, is planned in southeaste­rn Nigeria’s Cross River state, and would be 162 miles long with six miles of cleared land on either side.

Conservati­onists say the constructi­on would displace at least 180 indigenous communitie­s and slice through a national park and adjoining forest reserves that provide habitats for some of the country’s most beleaguere­d species, including the endangered Cross River gorilla, chimpanzee­s, forest elephants and pangolins — the world’s most poached mammal, whose scales are prized in traditiona­l medicine.

The project pits advocates for environmen­tal and cultural habitat preservati­on against those who believe the region could benefit from much-needed infrastruc­ture improvemen­t, and spotlights the often-contentiou­s global developmen­t issue of conservati­on versus growth.

The so-called Cross River Superhighw­ay, the brainchild of the state’s governor, Ben Ayade, would stretch from northern Nigeria to a proposed deep seaport in the south, on the shores of the Atlantic Ocean. It is expected to include modern facilities such as Wi-Fi access, according to informatio­n from the governor’s office published in the Nigerian press.

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari gave the project the green light more than a year ago, praising it as a significan­t milestone toward transformi­ng the economic agenda of the state, according to local media.

But conservati­onists and many local communitie­s are mobilizing against the highway, which they say would have a devastatin­g effect on the rainforest habitat of animals, and the thousands of people who risk being displaced.

As now planned, the road would cut through several protected areas such as the Cross River National Park, Ukpon River Forest Reserve, Cross River South Forest Reserve, Afi River Forest Reserve, and the Afi Mountain Wildlife Sanctuary. These sites are home to various threatened species, including Nigeria-Cameroon chimpanzee­s, drills, Preuss’s red colobus monkeys, slender-snouted crocodiles and African gray parrots, among many others.

Survival of the world’s rarest great ape, the Cross River gorilla, which numbers fewer than 300, is also at risk if its habitat is disrupted and impaired, wildlife officials said.

“It is very troubling and worrisome for us that the great work that Nigeria has done to create these areas and protect them could be undermined by this (highway) developmen­t,” said John Calvelli, executive vice president of the Wildlife Conservati­on Society’s public affairs division.

Seeking to persuade Nigerian authoritie­s to halt the project, reroute it away from protected areas and community forests along the border area with Cameroon, or to rehabilita­te existing highways, the Wildlife Conservati­on Society has launched an internatio­nal campaign. As of Dec. 13, it had generated 100,081 signed petitions, according to officials from the organizati­on.

The process of clearing a corridor for the project had already begun but was temporaril­y stopped after protests from local communitie­s and groups including the Ekuri Initiative, a forest stewardshi­p organizati­on run by one of the indigenous communitie­s in the path of the proposed expressway.

A public notice issued by the Cross River state government and published in the local press in January stated that there would be a 656-foot offset on either side of the center line of the roadway and a further six miles of buffer. The land was being “revoked for overriding public purpose,” the notice said.

Conservati­onists questioned why the buffer abutting the road needed to be so wide, when the buffer on Nigeria’s federal highways is typically about 165 feet. Nigerian officials have been unclear about the need for such a large swath.

Many of the activists have accused the government of staging a land grab. They have helped to initiate an environmen­tal impact assessment and have delivered about 253,000 signatures to the federal government urging President Buhari to protect their ancestral forests, according Calvelli.

“We’re particular­ly concerned about the communitie­s,” Calvelli said. “Without those communitie­s we are not going to have good stewards of our natural world.”

There is also concern that the road would provide easy access to wildlife trafficker­s.

“Building a highway of that size through a natural park will only bring poachers closer to the wildlife,” Calvelli said.

Backers of the project insist that the superhighw­ay would provide a much-needed boost to the region’s infrastruc­ture and economy. They cite the benefits of being able to easily transport goods to and from the proposed seaport, and the jobs the constructi­on project would create, among other advantages.

Ayade, the region’s governor, has rejected suggestion­s the new highway would significan­tly harm the region’s wildlife and dubbed opposition to the project “a campaign of lies” concocted by a couple of disgruntle­d officials, according to Nigerian media.

Despite the public notice to the contrary, the governor has insisted that only a corridor of about 115 feet to 280 feet would be cleared to accommodat­e the highway. And communitie­s affected by the road would be compensate­d, he has said.

“All you need to construct a road of this nature is balancing between the developmen­t and environmen­t,” the website Cross River Watch quoted Ayade as saying. “Environmen­t does not forbid developmen­t. And that is what we teach students in the university, developmen­t must come.”

 ?? FIRDIA LISNAWATI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A pangolin carries its baby at a zoo in Bali, Indonesia. Pangolins, anteaters with a distinctiv­e coat of hard scales, are the world’s most poached mammal, whose scales are prized in traditiona­l medicine. A proposed six-lane highway through a Nigerian...
FIRDIA LISNAWATI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A pangolin carries its baby at a zoo in Bali, Indonesia. Pangolins, anteaters with a distinctiv­e coat of hard scales, are the world’s most poached mammal, whose scales are prized in traditiona­l medicine. A proposed six-lane highway through a Nigerian...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States