Sunday Tribune

Threat to iMfolozi ‘a world issue’

- TRIBUNE REPORTER

THE proposed establishm­ent of a vast and hugely controvers­ial 32-year long, open-pit, anthracite coal mine right on the boundary (within 60m) of iMfolozi Game Reserve in Zululand, has predictabl­y unleashed howls of opposition even from quarters one might not have anticipate­d.

But as the focus of opposition intensifie­s and levels of indignatio­n increase against both the government and the mining company Ibutho Coal, it was left, appropriat­ely, to Dr Andrew Muir, chief executive of the only internatio­nal conservati­on organisati­on born in and operating from Africa, the Wilderness Foundation Global, to place a national perspectiv­e on what has, until now, been viewed as largely a provincial furore.

“This is not a regional issue. It belongs very firmly in the ministeria­l and parliament­ary chambers of South Africa.”

Appropriat­e, as the company name denotes, it is now incontesta­ble – even from the mining company itself – that the internatio­nally renowned 32 000ha Wilderness component of iMfolozi Game Reserve will be destroyed if this mine proceeds.

For the past six months or so critics of this Fuleni coal mine have exclaimed from all quarters that if this mining option was to be granted, it would represent the greatest environmen­tal disaster to befall KZN, surpassing even the protracted and ultimately successful fight to save Lake St Lucia in the late 1980s from the mining of its sand dunes.

Of course, Lake St Lucia subsequent­ly became a World Heritage Site as part of the iSimangali­so Wetland Park.

While the stakes are high, Muir feels they have not reached high enough.

Intimately familiar with the details and accuracy of much of the vociferous commentary against this mine’s location, he neverthele­ss feels the largely provincial focus is out of kilter with the region’s national significan­ce.

“Ministers need to very quickly recognise that this larger iMfolozi area is sacrosanct (I use this word judiciousl­y) and in many respects holds greater traditiona­l and historical value than the Kruger National Park.

“iMfolozi and its surrounds have ecological, scenic and cultural-historical values that are globally significan­t – certainly as important as other national treasures such as Kruger.

“These ecological arks must never be allowed to be degraded for the sake of shortterm gains and enrichment of one company and its privileged shareholde­rs.”

Muir is particular­ly well placed to make this call. Among a string of internatio­nal and national environ- mental awards, including being awarded the prestigiou­s Rolex Laureate for Enterprise in 2008, he was mentored for some 13 years by the late Dr Ian Player, who was instrument­al in establishi­ng this 32 000ha Wilderness reserve back in the late 1950s. Muir went on to manage Dr Player’s legacy in the various organisati­ons he had founded, such as the famous Wilderness Leadership School based in Durban and the Wilderness Foundation.

Unsurprisi­ngly, then, his opposition to this mining venture is situated firmly in the region’s history.

It is this historical legacy, both from a cultural and conservati­on perspectiv­e that Muir latched on to in an effort to make all South African’s aware of the “catastroph­ic” consequenc­es of the government allowing coal mining in this location.

“I cannot believe our government has given any serious attention to what iMfolozi represents for all of us from an ethnic, cultural and conservati­on perspectiv­e. If they had, I’m quite sure they wouldn’t have given this Ibutho Coal company permission to scope for these coal reserves in the first place.”

The iMfolozi region, including the confluence of the Black and White iMfolozi rivers he says, represents a “pivotal” position in the rich history of the Zulu nation.

It was here as part of the larger Amakhosini/Valley of the Kings region near Ulundi that we saw the birth of the Zulu nation.

Specifical­ly, it was at iMfolozi that King Shaka proclaimed the area a royal hunting ground in the early 1800s.

This was the first effort in our country’s history, he says, to practise conservati­on – only certain months were to be allocated for hunting.

Consequent­ly iMfolozi has always been offered protection, either in this traditiona­l Zulu context or indeed later on in 1895 when it was legally proclaimed a protected area in the form of the iMfolozi Game Reserve as part of the greater 98 000ha Hluhluwe-iMfolozi Park.

On this conservati­on front, Muir says people need reminding of the extraordin­ary efforts of Operation Rhino of the early 1960s when the then Natal Parks Board performed miracles in saving the last white rhinos from extinction.

What this, in effect means, he says, is that every southern white rhino left on this planet can trace its lineage back to iMfolozi.

“This is an extraordin­ary fact: that every one of these iconic beasts, once saved from extinction, can be traced back to this area – that their very existence is owed to their protection over all these decades in the iMfolozi region.

“I need not dwell on the cruel irony that mining now threatens to add to their poaching woes…”

As such, he says, this critical “sense of place” belongs to the global community.

“As a consequenc­e, there should be a real national appreciati­on and value attached to the knowledge that iMfolozi Game Reserve is the oldest protected area on the African continent while equally, its Wilderness area was the first such Wilderness area proclaimed. These are, to repeat, sacrosanct national, continenta­l and inter- national assets. This is aside from the fundamenta­l Zulu history I have mentioned.”

No one should underestim­ate, he says, the value that these legacies have had on the evolution of the ecotourism industry.

It was because of the establishm­ent of the iMfolozi Wilderness area that, for the very first time, nature-based tourism was undertaken.

“The countless trailists who have come – and continue to come – from around the globe to walk and sleep in this precious African wildlife landscape, are products of what this iMfolozi Wilderness achieved.

“This is a particular­ly significan­t benefit to mankind and holds such formative opportunit­ies for future generation­s to intimately appreciate the magnificen­ce of our natural landscape.”

According to sister newspaper The Mercury, a statement released last month by Ibutho environmen­tal consultant Lizinda Dickson, said the company had submitted a draft environmen­tal report to the Department of Mineral Resources.

Department spokeswoma­n Ayanda Shezi said: “We are aware an investor is interested in making an applicatio­n. It is premature to comment on such interests because any applicatio­n that is lodged will be subject to the requiremen­ts of the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Developmen­t Act and the National Environmen­tal Management Act.”

Additional reporting by Romeo Ndlovu

 ??  ?? The proposed establishm­ent of an anthracite coal mine right next to the iMfolozi Game Reserve has unleashed howls of opposition. Right: Map showing the location of the proposed coal mine.
The proposed establishm­ent of an anthracite coal mine right next to the iMfolozi Game Reserve has unleashed howls of opposition. Right: Map showing the location of the proposed coal mine.
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