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All eyes on profession­al hunter

With Cecil’s death Zimbabwean­s should look harder at who benefits from wildlife, writes Ian Scoones

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Profession­al hunter, Theodore Bronkhorst, sits in his car outside a magistrate’s court in Hwange about

700km south-west of Harare, Zimbabwe, yesterday. The trial of the profession­al hunter who helped an

American kill Cecil the lion in an allegedly illegal hunt in Zimbabwe has

been postponed to September 28. Bronkhorst faces charges of failing to prevent an unlawful hunt. If convicted,

he faces up to 15 years in prison.

THE huge uproar generated by the shooting of Cecil the lion provides a fascinatin­g lens into Zimbabwe’s new elite land politics and the relationsh­ip between humans and “wild” nature.

The country’s extensive game ranches and conservanc­ies were mostly subject to land reform in the early 2000s. Many of the former owners were evicted, along with their safari operations. But this land, unlike most of the agricultur­al areas elsewhere in the country, was not handed over to land-hungry peasants or unemployed urbanites, but to elites.

For a time there was an argument that conservati­on areas were not to be part of the land reform, and that a separate wildlife-based land reform would be instituted. This

was to be under the control of the Ministry of Environmen­t, and not the Ministry of Lands, and so would guarantee the sanctity of the wildlife estate as a good source of revenue – from hunting, but more especially tourism.

But this soon got overridden by politics and many of the conservanc­y lands and other game farms were allocated as part of A2 (medium-to largescale) land reform. And, as with a lot of A2 allocation­s – and particular­ly in the conservanc­ies that many assumed to be very lucrative businesses – to well-connected elites.

Elite beneficiar­ies of land reform in Zimbabwe such as Honest Ndlovu have hooked up with white safari owners as they search for sources of income from their land.

The list of these beneficiar­ies reads like a who’s who of the Zanu-PF political-military elite. Honest Trymore Ndlovu, the owner of the land where Cecil was shot, was one such beneficiar­y. The new landowners in search of income from their land have hooked up with white safari operators, some of whom formerly operated in the same areas.

Conservati­on, and hunting, have been long associated with white privilege and colonial expansion, and a European constructi­on of landscape as wilderness. Cecil (and the name – same as Cecil Rhodes – becomes more appropriat­e with this lens) is also about issues of race, colonialis­m and the control over land.

Wildlife is once again perpetuati­ng a new elite land politics, excluding wider population­s from the benefits. This time it’s with new (black) faces. But many of the same unsavoury connection­s of the past remain, with links b e - tween politician­s, poachers and hunting business entreprene­urs never far from the surface.

The Cecil story also exposes some of the racial dimensions of the relationsh­ips between wildlife, land and hunting in Zimbabwe. The hunting business has a pedigree going back to the establishm­ent of hunting blocks in various parts of the country in colonial times. Hunting was always seen as central to the colonial conquest involving taming wild Africa.

Many white farmers turned their properties over to private game hunting reserves in the 1980s and 1990s, sometimes as part of large blocks of land where the fences were removed. These were called “conservanc­ies” – such as Gwaai in the west, as well as many others, notably the well-known Save Valley conservanc­y in the south-east.

Conservanc­ies

These blocks and conservanc­ies became the playground­s of a rich, white elite, some local but many internatio­nal, with Americans and Europeans being regular customers. Unlike the Campfire (Communal Areas Management Programme for Indigenous Resources ) arrangemen­ts, the benefits from conservanc­ies to surroundin­g population­s were minimal, beyond a few concession­ary “outreach” efforts.

The Cecil case raises pertinent questions about how hunting revenues can contribute to developmen­t.

From the 1980s, Zimbabwe was at the forefront of an internatio­nal movement away from a preservati­onist position on conservati­on to one that emphasised conservati­on for developmen­t through “sustainabl­e utilisatio­n”. Hunting, it was argued, could be seen as a form of management, as long as careful cull quotas were adhered to.

Alongside Cecil, many lions (presumably without names) have been killed in the past years as part of regulated quotas. According to Peter Lindsay and colleagues in a 2013 PLOS One article, the annual lion quota for Zimbabwe is 101 across 38 000sq/km of hunting area on a mix of land-use types.

On average, 42.5 lions – less than half the quota – were killed each year between 2008 and 2011, presumably because of the drop in hunting visits to Zimbabwe in recent years.

Along with other southern African countries, Zimbabwe pioneered an approach linking game hunting with developmen­t, and the famous Campfire programme from the late 1980s became a flagship, with hunting concession­s offered on communal lands near parks and safari areas.

The revenues raised were considerab­le, especially for the big five. About 90% of Campfire revenues were from sport hunting, not other forms of tourism. Funds were ploughed back into developmen­t projects with dividends going to both the local community and Rural District Councils.

Campfire did not always work as planned, and there have been many critiques. But the principle of making use of local resources for local developmen­t has been widely acknowledg­ed in the region – if not in East Africa where a more preservati­onist strand of conservati­on persists.

What, then, should we make of the sad demise of Cecil? Knee-jerk reactions resulting in bans on hunting or trophy imports will not solve anything. Past bans elsewhere have made things worse, with a rise in poaching, and decline in conservati­on protection.

While the posturing rhetoric about extraditin­g an American dentist dominates now, Zimbabwean­s should look harder at who benefits from wildlife. If revenues are to be generated from hunting quotas (and I am a great supporter of this route to conservati­on), they should not just benefit a narrow elite, involving a new pact between white hunters and their safari companies and the new politicall­y connected black elite.

Benefit

If Cecil and his other 100 odd fellow lions are to be part of a regulated hunting quota, so creating a resource for developmen­t, then the conservanc­ies and game ranches need to be opened up for wider use to generate broader benefit.

Only then will the wildlife assets of the nation be properly shared and the habitats preserved for Cecil and his relatives. Perhaps the outcry over Cecil can result in a proper wildlife-based land reform, so such wildlife can benefit everyone, not just elites – black or white.

Scoones is Professori­al Fellow, Institute of Developmen­t Studies at University of Sussex. This article first appeared on theconvers­ation.com

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PICTURE: AP
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