Tatler Hong Kong

Call of the Wild

NGO African Parks is protecting some of the continent’s most vulnerable ecosystems—with help from Nancy Lee and a handful of other Asian philanthro­pists

- BY OLIVER GILES. PORTRAIT BY AFFA CHAN

NGO African Parks is protecting some of the continent’s most vulnerable ecosystems—with help from Nancy Lee and a handful of other Asian philanthro­pists

Nancy Lee was just a few years old when she stepped on to the deck of an ocean liner, looked towards the horizon and set eyes on South Africa. “It was 1962 and my family was moving from South America to Asia,” recalls Nancy. “We travelled by ship the whole way. It took us three months to sail from Buenos Aires to Cape Town, then up through the Indian Ocean. It was an amazing experience— people don’t travel like that any more. I was very, very young, but I remember South Africa clearly. It was magical—i remember thinking it was like a beautiful garden.”

It’s an impression that has stuck with Nancy—and it’s a landscape she’s now fighting to protect. Last year, after decades directing her philanthro­py primarily towards the arts, Nancy took on a very different role as a founding member of the Asia Pacific Advisory Board of non-government­al organisati­on African Parks. “I became aware of the work of African Parks through a friend who witnessed several elephant relocation­s in areas managed by African Parks,” says Nancy. “I thought it was a wonderful thing.”

The complicate­d business of elephant translocat­ion—moving a single elephant can require helicopter­s, cranes and a team of dozens—is just one small part of African Parks’ work. The NGO was founded in 2000 to take on responsibi­lity for national parks that were being mismanaged, often resulting in the destructio­n of irreplacea­ble ecosystems, insecurity for local people and dramatic losses of animals that were being poached and brutally butchered for their meat, horns or hides.

African Parks takes these struggling reserves off the hands of politician­s and assumes full control of all aspects of management—including conservati­on, community developmen­t, law enforcemen­t and more—while the government retains ownership. Currently, African Parks manages 15 national parks and protected areas in nine countries. In total, these parks cover more than 100,000 square kilometres— an area nearly the size of England.

This public-private model was part of what interested Nancy about the NGO. “The fact that African Parks works in partnershi­p with government­s

to reforest degraded land, reintroduc­e wildlife that had become locally extinct, train local rangers to a high standard of loyalty and profession­alism and teach local communitie­s to farm and live in harmony with wild animals is a particular­ly impressive model of sustainabi­lity,” she says.

It’s also proven to work. All African Parks reserves are run along business lines, so that everything from the funding to the growth in wildlife numbers to the revenue generated for the local community can be measured year-on-year. To cite one example, in the nine years since African Parks partnered with the Rwandan government and assumed management of the country’s Akagera National Park, the NGO has reintroduc­ed lions and Eastern black rhinos, both of which were previously locally extinct, and returned the park to its “big five” status. In 2017 alone, these animals helped attract more than 37,000 tourists to the park, generating a record US$1.6 million in revenue—money that was ploughed back into the park and community programmes.

Animals aren’t the only ones benefiting. “African Parks views the community as an essential part of its efforts. It builds schools, supports teachers and provides healthcare,” says Nancy. “If the communitie­s don’t see the benefit of the park and the wildlife being preserved, then the park won’t work in the long run,” adds Neil Harvey, the Zimbabwe-born chair of the NGO’S Asia Pacific Advisory Board and former CEO of Credit Suisse in Hong Kong and Greater China. African Parks is one of the largest employers in most regions where it works, and trains locals to become everything from anti-poaching rangers to safari guides and chefs at luxury camps, while more than 79,000 children attend schools run by the organisati­on.

“The African Parks model is really scalable and can be adapted in every country,” says Neil. “In Malawi we started with one park and now there are four parks under management; in Rwanda there’s one and there may be another coming online soon; in Zambia there are two parks, and it looks like a third may be under way soon. The African Parks model works.”

These parks in remote corners of Africa might seem like a distant concern for many, but they are of global importance. “Climate change is the single great challenge to the future of our planet, and we need to make sure there are viable intact areas of land—such as the forest in the Congo and the Zambian wetlands—that are being preserved for the long term,” says Nancy. “This will ensure carbon sequestrat­ion for the benefit of the rest of the planet and will preserve essential water systems.”

The Asia Pacific Advisory Board is only six months old, but is already contributi­ng hugely to the organisati­on. “We have been really impressed with the ambitions and leadership coming out of the Asia Pacific Advisory Board,” says Peter Fearnhead, CEO and co-founder of African Parks. “And key to this relationsh­ip between Asia and Africa is the financial support that is critical for us to fund our activities.”

Another connection between Africa and Asia is more controvers­ial. Sadly, the poaching of some of Africa’s most vulnerable animals is due to demand for animal products from Asia, where ingredient­s such as rhino horn and pangolin scales are used in traditiona­l Chinese medicine. “It is a sensitive topic, but many animal parts from Africa are trafficked through Hong Kong to China and Vietnam,” says Neil. Adds Nancy: “The Asia Pacific Advisory Board is working to raise awareness regarding the misuse of animal parts, such as rhino horn and pangolin scales for medicinal purposes, which have no basis in modern science.”

The board—which comprises Neil, Nancy and Markus Jebsen in Hong Kong, as well as Leo Evers in Singapore and Rajiv Louis in Jakarta—is particular­ly focused on raising

“IT’S IMPORTANT FOR ASIA TO BE PART OF THE SOLUTION TO CONSERVATI­ON IN AFRICA”

awareness among schoolchil­dren. “We are talking to Chinese Internatio­nal School and Kellett School at the moment,” says Neil. “And for Harrow Internatio­nal School we’re planning a school trip to one of the parks, which will be a great thing to do—being there really opens your eyes.”

Nancy and Neil want others to travel to African Parks reserves, too. There’s accommodat­ion in most African Parks, ranging from basic campsites to plush, five-star lodges operated either by the organisati­on itself or a luxury safari company. Talks, films, books and more are great for spreading the word, but a first-hand experience of coming face-to-face with an elephant or hearing a lion roar in the distance can change people’s attitudes—and behaviour—for life. “The ultimate goal is to make the parks self-sustaining through tourism,” says Neil. “Relying on donor money, NGO money and money from the EU and US government­s and philanthro­pic families is not sustainabl­e in the long term.”

The future is on African Parks’ employees and supporters’ minds at the moment because next year will mark the organisati­on’s 20th anniversar­y—and there are big plans. “We are on track to have 20 parks in our portfolio by the end of 2020,” says Peter, meaning five more parks will come under African Parks management in the coming months.

Back in Hong Kong, Nancy hopes she’ll have some royal help spreading the word. “I hope that Prince Harry will come to Asia next year to help spread the message, as he’s president of African Parks,” she says.

But whether Prince Harry visits Asia or not, Nancy, Neil and the rest of the Asia Pacific Advisory Board will keep doing all they can to support the parks, which are some of the world’s last true wilderness­es. “The world is more interconne­cted than ever, and the byproducts of our current lifestyle affect Africa very directly,” says Nancy. “It’s important for Asia to be part of the solution to conservati­on in Africa.”

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from left: Nancy Lee at home in Hong Kong; a zebra in Rwanda’s Akagera National Park, the largest protected wetland in central Africa; the sun sets over Liuwa Plain National Park in Zambia, the site of the second largest blue wildebeest migration in the world
Clockwise from left: Nancy Lee at home in Hong Kong; a zebra in Rwanda’s Akagera National Park, the largest protected wetland in central Africa; the sun sets over Liuwa Plain National Park in Zambia, the site of the second largest blue wildebeest migration in the world
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 ??  ?? Clockwise from left: Black lechwe, which are only found in the African Parksmanag­ed Bangweulu Wetlands in Zambia; a leopard in Akagera National Park; African Parks rangers patrol Bazaruto Archipelag­o National Park, which protects both terrestria­l and marine habitats
Clockwise from left: Black lechwe, which are only found in the African Parksmanag­ed Bangweulu Wetlands in Zambia; a leopard in Akagera National Park; African Parks rangers patrol Bazaruto Archipelag­o National Park, which protects both terrestria­l and marine habitats

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