Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Armed with phones and seeds, jobless Kenyans tackle illegal logging

- By Kagondu Njagi

KWALE, Kenya, April 15 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Standing under a thick green canopy in coastal Kenya's Shim Hills, Mohamed Mwaramuno squints at his fellow forest ranger's smartphone.

With about a dozen rangers, he has been using an app that through satellite feeds maps signs of forest fires, illegal logging and people encroachin­g on water sources, to stem worsening deforestat­ion in Kwale County during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The app has made work easier for us,” said Mwaramuno. “Instead of patrolling the dangerous terrain we just receive these feeds and then we can directly go to the sites that have been disturbed.” Developed by the Kenya Forest Service ( KFS) and the University of Leicester in Britain, the system launched in the summer of 2020 and combines satellite feeds with real- time global mapping, explained George Wara, KFS ecosystem conservato­r in Kwale.

The data is interprete­d by a team at the university and relayed to KFS headquarte­rs in Nairobi, which sends the informatio­n to patrolling officers at community forest stations.

“The officers then visit the sites to assess the damage and stop anyone they catch cutting down trees or taking water

Currently, about 7% of Kenya is forested, according to government figures - and environmen­tal groups say more than 5 million trees are cut down every day for firewood, charcoal or other purposes.

The government's goal of having at least 10% of the country covered in trees by 2022 has taken a hit from the financial downturn caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic, say forest authoritie­s.

Official figures show that Kenya's unemployme­nt rate has nearly doubled to more than 10% since the start of the pandemic.

Many people have turned to illegal logging and poaching to make money, and COVID-19 restrictio­ns and illness have left the county short of rangers to stop them, Kilelu said.

He pointed to Shimba Hills, a 30,000- hectare ( 74,000- acre) national reserve on Kenya's south coast, where he says there has been a jump in encroachme­nt as the remaining officers find it impossible to patrol the whole forest.

Project organisers say the new system allows officers and community rangers to cover an area more efficientl­y, focusing manpower on vulnerable parts of the forest.

As a result, said Wara at the KFS, there have been only three forest fires in the past two months, compared to about a dozen over the same period last year.

The conservato­r explained that poachers have a technique of setting fire to grasslands at the edges of forests to encourage fresh pasture to grow, which lures out small game, making them easier to catch.

The fires would often spread out of control and into the forest itself, he said, but with more people patrolling, poachers are mostly staying away.

“Incidences of illegal logging and water abstractio­n have also dropped dramatical­ly,” he said.

TECH POTENTIAL

Nasiri Maulidi, chairman of a local forest restoratio­n group in Kwale County, said the project is also helping tackle unemployme­nt in the villages.

“The majority of the youth here are educated, but they have no jobs. This partnershi­p has helped reduce idleness while also engaging the society in greening Kenya,” he said.

Chisenga Ali chats happily with a colleague as they water tree saplings. In May last year, the pandemic forced her to close her clothes business.

“My children are going to school and are well fed thanks to this job. I am also not worried about paying rent,” said Ali, who said her landlord locked her out of her house three times due to late payment since the start of the pandemic.

Officials and conservati­on experts see the pilot project as a sign of Kenya's confidence in the role technology can play in battling forest crime and creating job opportunit­ies.

A report by the Pew Research Centre published in 2019 showed more than 85% of adults in Kenya reported owning a mobile phone.

If projects like the new reporting system had been in place when the pandemic first struck, they would have ensured the continuity of conservati­on efforts, even in the face of recession, said Kunga Ngece, an independen­t conservati­on consultant.

“Technology in conservati­on is not an endgame in itself,” Ngece said in a phone interview.

“But it has proved effective and able to create new opportunit­ies in a working environmen­t that would normally be stuck with traditiona­l systems of job creation.” Ramadhani Mohamed, one of the locals planting trees in Kwale, said the government should do more to tap into the country's large pool of mobile phone users.

“Kenyan youth are some of the most technologi­cally savvy in Africa. The use of smart apps should not only be used to fight forest crime, but also to prepare the country for future emergencie­s like COVID-19,” said the 20- year- old.

Chris Kiptoo, principal secretary in the ministry of environmen­t and forestry, said in a phone interview that “the opportunit­ies that the mobile phone revolution has brought with them can also be used to involve communitie­s in forest restoratio­n efforts.” Mohamed said he had been struggling to find a job since finishing high school, and spent most of his time with his friends in the village, which sometimes led to drug and alcohol abuse.

When he heard in October that the KFS was recruiting locals for a forest restoratio­n project, he enlisted right away.

“I used to rely on my parents for pocket money to buy clothes,” Mohamed said, as he prepared tree seedlings for planting.

“But this programme has turned the tables, because now I am able to contribute to my family's finances.”

“The app has made work easier for us,” said Mwaramuno. “Instead of patrolling the dangerous terrain we just receive these feeds and then we can directly go to the sites that have been disturbed.” Developed by the Kenya Forest Service (KFS) and the University of Leicester in Britain, the system launched in the summer of 2020 and combines satellite feeds with realtime global mapping, explained George Wara, KFS ecosystem conservato­r in Kwale.

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