Santa Fe New Mexican

South Sudan tries to protect wildlife after a long conflict

- By Sam Mednick ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

BIRE KPATOUS GAME RESERVE, South Sudan — Charles Matthew secures his beret, slings a rifle over his shoulder and prepares a team for an overnight foot patrol in Bire Kpatous, one of South Sudan’s game reserves that survived the country’s civil war but are now increasing­ly threatened by poachers and encroachin­g human settlement­s.

Matthew, 45, said he’s proud of his work after years of being a soldier and has learned a lot about wildlife. “I didn’t even know the names of species like aardvark, pangolin, crocodile and chimpanzee,” he said of his knowledge when he started as a ranger 14 years ago.

But he worries about the reserve: “When poachers come and are well-armed, we can’t get there in time.”

South Sudan is trying to rebuild its six national parks and 13 game reserves, which cover more than 13 percent of the country’s terrain, following the five-year civil war that ended last year after killing nearly 400,000 people. A fragile peace deal still has key steps to carry out.

The fighting stripped the country of much wildlife and the parks are rudimentar­y, lacking lodges, visitors’ centers and roads. There is no significan­t tourism; the parks department does not even keep statistics on the number of visitors.

“Given these challenges, the biodiversi­ty of South Sudan is in peril,” said DeeAnn Reeder, a conservati­onist and professor at Bucknell University who has done research there. She called conservati­on efforts “significan­t but relatively small in scale given the vastness of the country” that still has the potential for surprise. The documentat­ion of forest elephants in South Sudan was a “very significan­t find.”

That biodiversi­ty remains rich with more than 300 mammal species, including 11 primates. The country boasts one of Africa’s greatest annual antelope migrations.

Now the biggest threat to the country’s wildlife is poaching, the scourge that afflicts parks and reserves across Africa.

Bire Kpatous, near the Congo border and a convergenc­e point for flora and fauna from Central and East Africa, has one of the region’s “forgotten forests,” as some conservati­onists call them. It is home to animals such as bongo antelopes, badger bats, African golden cats, forest elephants and forest buffalos.

The spread of unlicensed firearms, however, threatens to decimate wildlife while the resources to combat it are scarce. South Sudan’s government allocated nearly $6 million for the parks and reserves last year, a figure considered woefully inadequate by some local authoritie­s.

Western Equatoria state, where Bire Kpatous is located, has just one car for the 184 rangers overseeing three game reserves and one national park.

Some donors are stepping up. South Sudan last month received a pledge of $7.6 million from the United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t and another $1.5 million from the Wildlife Conservati­on Society to protect the parks.

 ??  ?? Rangers walk in a field in March near the Bire Kpatous game reserve along the Congolese border. South Sudan is trying to rebuild its vast national parks and game reserves following a five-year civil war that killed nearly 400,000 people.
Rangers walk in a field in March near the Bire Kpatous game reserve along the Congolese border. South Sudan is trying to rebuild its vast national parks and game reserves following a five-year civil war that killed nearly 400,000 people.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States