Duke’s team takes the fight to rhino poachers
Conservationist group backed by the Duke will take on poachers to save elephants and black rhinos
A conservation group backed by the Duke of Sussex is to combat rampant poaching in Zimbabwe after taking over the management of Matusadona National Park. The Duke is the president of African Parks, which hopes to transform the neglected, 1,000sq mile area – home to elephant and black rhino populations – into a leading safari destination. The Duke spent almost three weeks working with African Parks in Malawi in 2016.
Victoria Ward and
Peta Thornycroft in Johannesburg
A CONSERVATION group supported by the Duke of Sussex has taken over the management of one of Zimbabwe’s most neglected national parks that has fallen victim to rampant poaching
African Parks aims to reform the 1,000 square mile Matusadona National Park’s elephant and black rhino populations and transform the site into a leading safari destination. The Duke spent almost three weeks working with African Parks in Malawi in 2016 as the organisation embarked on one of the biggest elephant translocation projects in conservation history. He returned to the Liwonde National Park headquarters in September this year for an update on its progress.
Writing in this newspaper during that recent tour of southern Africa, he revealed that the experience three years earlier had taken his understanding and respect for conservation to a “whole new level”.
In 2017, he became president of African Parks, a sign of his personal commitment to the region. Peter Fearnhead, its chief executive, was a guest at his wedding to Meghan Markle.
Matusadona National Park, in northern Zimbabwe, is flanked by the giant Lake Kariba and has two rivers running through it.
Frances Read, from African Parks, said it was one of the country’s flagship and most valuable areas, with the potential to become a leading safari destination. But it was in desperate need of funding and proper management.
Poachers have all but wiped out the park’s black rhino population while elephant numbers have been severely depleted. Ms Read said the first job would be to secure its borders to allow wildlife populations to recover before implementing effective management structures and law enforcement strategies.
“We will then be working with the local community so they start to see that this is for them and that this is an asset,” she told The Daily Telegraph. “Matusadona is a very special place for Zimbabwe and has a lot of potential for tourism and socio-economic development.”
The 20-year contract awarded to African Parks – its first foray into the country – is considered all the more remarkable by conservationists who had thought it highly unlikely that the government of Zimbabwe would ever allow a foreign organisation to take control of its wildlife resources.
Blondie Leathem, one of Zimbabwe’s best-known conservationists and safari operators, said: “This is one of the most exciting things that has happened for wildlife in Zimbabwe for a very long time.”
The Duke recently described the continent as his “second home” and has made no secret of the special place it holds in his heart, having first travelled there in the aftermath of the death of his mother, Diana, Princess of Wales, in 1997. During his tour of southern Africa with the Duchess of Sussex and their son Archie, he revealed their “life work will be predominantly focused on Africa, on conservation”.
While in Malawi in 2016, the Duke expressed great concern for conservation parks, saying: “I do worry. I think everyone should worry. We need to look after them, because otherwise our children will not have a chance to see what we have seen. This is God’s test: if we can’t save some animals in a wilderness area, what else can’t we do?”
African Parks is a non-profit NGO working with governments and local communities. Its latest agreement with Zimbabwe, signed on Friday, takes the number of parks it manages to 16 in 10 countries covering almost 11 million hectares.