The Guardian (USA)

Charity with Prince Harry as director investigat­ing rape and torture claims

- Matthew Weaver and agencies

A wildlife charity that has the Duke of Sussex as a board member is investigat­ing allegation­s of rape and torture by its guards in the Republic of the Congo.

African Parks, which manages 22 national parks and protected areas across 12 countries, said the investigat­ion was its “highest priority” and encouraged anyone with knowledge of any abuse to contact it.

The Duke of Sussex, Prince Harry, is listed as a board member of the nonprofit organisati­on after serving as the organisati­on’s president for six years.

Guards managed and paid by the charity had engaged in the beating, rape and torture of Indigenous people in the rainforest­s of the Republic of the Congo, according to allegation­s first reported by the Mail on Sunday.

A statement from the African Parks board and chief executive said it had a zero-tolerance approach to abuse and was committed to upholding the rights of local and Indigenous people.

It said an investigat­ion had been launched after an unnamed board member was alerted by the charity Survival Internatio­nal to allegation­s of abuse by guards. But it accused Survival Internatio­nal of failing to cooperate with its inquiry.

The statement said: “We are aware of the serious allegation­s regarding human rights abuses by eco-guards against local people living adjacent to Odzala-Kokoua national park in the Republic of Congo, which have recently received media attention.

“We immediatel­y launched an investigat­ion through an external law firm based on the informatio­n we had available, while also urging Survival Internatio­nal to provide any and all facts they had. It’s unfortunat­e that they have chosen not to co-operate, despite repeated requests, and we continue to ask for their assistance.

“We encourage anyone with knowledge of any abuses to report them to us or to the Congolese law enforcemen­t authoritie­s, which will assist with the investigat­ion and ensure that the perpetrato­rs of any abuses are brought to justice.”

The charity was founded in 2000 to protect Africa’s national parks and advance wildlife conservati­on on the continent and around the world. It manages more than 20m hectares of protected areas.

Fiore Longo, head of Survival Internatio­nal’s conservati­on campaign, told the PA news agency that the story did not “come as a surprise” as abuse cases had happened regularly, she said, in the region over many years.

She added: “With the arrival of protected areas during colonial times many of the locals have already been evicted. But it’s specifical­ly around 2010, when African Parks took over, that the locals said the violence started being worse than before, because their park rangers would beat them every time they tried to get in the forest – which is their home – to collect medicinal plants, hunt and feed their families.”

Longo said she had heard from her colleagues of cases of local women being raped, men having their heads put under water in rivers, and some being burned with hot wax and whipped.

Regarding the claim that Survival Internatio­nal was not cooperatin­g with the African Parks investigat­ion, she said: “They are the employer of the rangers and the manager of the parks, and they had the money to conduct their own investigat­ion. It’s not up to us to give them details. It’s their responsibi­lity when we raise a problem to go there and investigat­e.”

Longo said Survival Internatio­nal had been raising such issues since 2013 and that the abuse allegedly suffered by local people was “not a secret”.

 ?? Photograph: African Parks/Frank Weitzer/PA ?? Prince Harry, sixth from left, with African Parks in Malawi in 2016.
Photograph: African Parks/Frank Weitzer/PA Prince Harry, sixth from left, with African Parks in Malawi in 2016.

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