New Era

Where wildlife produces medical doctors

- Emmanuel Koro

In Africa, some communitie­s still don’t have a single person who has graduated as a medical doctor. The reasons are many. It could be a lack of funds for brilliant children to further their education.

In some very unfortunat­e situations, it can just be a case of not having high achievers coming from certain communitie­s.

The unthinkabl­e rural benefits from a wildlife hunting revenue-built school in Zimbabwe’s wildlife-rich Mid-Zambezi Valley were stunningly revealed by a Masoka hunting community representa­tive, Ishmael Chaukura this month.

Right from the ‘belly’ of the poor Masoka community, popped two medical doctors; from the hunting-revenue-built Masoka School.

Now we know who they are.

One of them has impressive­ly narrated how he personally benefited from learning at a hunting revenue-built Masoka School.

For the two medical doctors who are now working in the country’s capital city Harare and adding great value to badly needed medical services at a time when most of them are opting to work abroad, it was not just a case of learning at a school built using wildlife revenue.

According to one of the medical doctors, Dr Knowledge Fero, after completing their education at Masoka School, he and the other medical doctor further benefited from wildlife hunting revenue that Masoka community used to pay their university fees at the University of Zimbabwe.

Masoka’s historic wildlife revenuepow­ered production of medical doctors started with the graduation of its first medical doctor, Goodluck Fero.

No doubt that he must have inspired the Masoka community, especially his brother Knowledge Fero who years later also became a medical doctor.

Apart from producing medical doctors, Masoka school has produced teachers, profession­al hunters, accountant­s, mechanics, electricia­ns, plumbers, businesspe­ople and health workers such as nurses who not only have lifted themselves out of poverty but are also contributi­ng towards the socio-economic developmen­t of Zimbabwe.

This seems to be a developmen­t wish list for most African rural communitie­s, especially those not benefiting from hunting revenue.

“It’s true,” said Dr Knowledge Fero. “I learnt at Masoka, a school that was built from hunting revenue under the Zimbabwe Communal Areas Programme For Indigenous Resources (CAMPFIRE).

“The Masoka school is a testament for all to see and change their perception­s towards wildlife conservati­on.”

He said that his community’s benefits from CAMPFIRE wildlife hunting revenue “are not only limited to Masoka school and teachers’ houses but include other infrastruc­ture such as road rehabilita­tion, widening and bridge constructi­on.”

Dr Fero said that before the coming in of wildlife hunting revenue and conservati­on, Masoka was not accessible at all – it was totally cut out from the rest of the world.

The wildlife revenue linked them to the rest of the world with US$30 000 having been used to construct the firstever road, effectivel­y linking Masoka to the rest of the country and no doubt the world. Previously villagers had to walk 50 kilometres to the nearest bus stop.

Before they started benefiting from hunting revenue, the remote, hot and dry Masoka area, near Kanyemba on Zimbabwe’s northeaste­rn border with Zambia and Mozambique, didn’t offer much hope for local residents.

They continued to pay for the costs of living with wildlife as marauding elephants and other wildlife often ruined their few

crops, killed their livestock and often killed their loved ones, including breadwinne­rs.

Fortunatel­y, the developmen­ts brought by hunting revenue dumped this unbearable suffering into the dustbin of history.

“We have built ourselves this clinic, drilled the boreholes and built the teachers’ houses, Masoka School and more,” said Masoka headman Kanyurira in a recent interview.

Poaching is also now history as Masoka residents continue to enjoy benefits from wildlife and other natural resources in the area. The benefits from wildlife have made them appreciate the need to become actively involved in wildlife and wildlife habitat conservati­on.

Other wildlife use benefits enjoyed by Masoka include employment creation for the youth through working as rangers and also working with safari operators and the constructi­on of a clinic.

For Masoka, hunting revenue also brought fun with some of it having been used to support sporting activities such as soccer. It created skills developmen­t and entreprene­urship opportunit­ies and was used to fund sewing projects for women.

Dr Knowledge Fero fondly remembers, “At year ends people would get dividends as bonuses for being part of the conservati­on initiative­s. The benefits are many and for those who are opposed to wildlife use and conservati­on [the animal rights movement], I think they have no place in modern society because I am a living testimony of [wildlife hunting revenue benefits]. Even as I was furthering my studies in medicine, wildlife proceeds would still be channeled towards my educationa­l fees. I am very grateful.”

A Masoka community representa­tive, Ishmael Chaukura, said that about 40 schools were built using wildlife revenue in Zimbabwe’s CAMPFIRE communitie­s that cover 60% of the country’s total land area. This shows that wildlife has great potential to continue uniquely making people born into poverty find a quick escape route out of it through education.

Education is enabling them to contribute not only towards the socio-economic developmen­t of their country Zimbabwe but also for the improvemen­t of their families.

Some of the graduates from other wildlife hunting revenue-built schools are working as maths and English teachers in South Africa.

They include Rumbidzai Tapfuma from Chisunga Village in Mbire, Sam Chaukura from Masoka and Samson Assamu also from Masoka.

“Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world,” said the late first president of a democratic South Africa, Nelson Mandela.

Meanwhile, Chaukura said that only time was going tell, if world leaders who claim to support socioecono­mic developmen­ts in Africa “can now allow education brought by trophy hunting to continue, by totally dismissing animal rights groups that are opposed to hunting; out of ignorance”.

Arne Duncan, US secretary of education said in an April 2013 statement, “Education is the key to eliminatin­g gender inequality, to reducing poverty, to creating a sustainabl­e planet, to preventing needless deaths and illness, and to fostering peace. And in a knowledge economy, education is the new currency by which nations maintain economic competitiv­eness and global prosperity.”

Therefore, one might conclude that only the people who want to harm the African people and their wildlife can suggest that hunting should be banned and sadly end the impressive education benefits that hunting revenue is bringing to rural Africa.

*Emmanuel Koro is a Johannesbu­rgbased internatio­nal award-winning independen­t environmen­tal journalist who writes extensivel­y on environmen­t and developmen­t issues in Africa.

 ??  ?? Spin-offs… Hunting revenue built Masoka School in Zimbabwe that produced two medical doctors.
Spin-offs… Hunting revenue built Masoka School in Zimbabwe that produced two medical doctors.
 ??  ?? Homes… Hunting revenue was also used to build teachers’ houses at Masoka School.
Homes… Hunting revenue was also used to build teachers’ houses at Masoka School.

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