NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Zim bird sanctuary has 400 species, not enough tourists

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AFISH eagle swoops over the water to grab a fish in its talons and then flies to its nest. Nearby are a martial eagle, a black eagle, an Egyptian vulture and hundreds of other birds. With an estimated 400 species of birds on an idyllic spot on Zimbabwe’s Lake Chivero, about 40km south-west of Harare, the Kuimba Shiri bird sanctuary has been drawing tourists for more than 15 years.

The southern African country’s only bird park has survived tumultuous times, including violent land invasions and a devastatin­g economic collapse but the outbreak of coronaviru­s is proving a stern test.

“I thought I had survived the worst, but this coronaviru­s is something else,” said owner Gary Strafford.

“One-third of our visitors are from China. They stopped coming in February ... and when we were shut down in March, that was just unbelievab­le.”

A life-long bird enthusiast, Strafford (62) establishe­d the centre for injured, orphaned and abandoned birds in 1992 and tourism has kept the park going.

With Zimbabwe’s inflation rising to over 750%, tourism establishm­ents are battling a vicious economic downturn worsened by the new coronaviru­s travel restrictio­ns.

Zimbabwe’s tourism was already facing problems. The country recorded just over 2 million visitors in 2019, an 11% decline from the previous year, according to official figures.

However, tourism remained one of the country’s biggest foreign currency earners, along with minerals and tobacco.

Now tourism “is dead because of coronaviru­s,” said Tinashe Farawo, the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority spokesman. National parks and other animal sanctuarie­s such as Kuimba Shiri are battling to stay afloat, he said.

“We are in trouble. All along, we have been relying on tourism to fund our conservati­on ... now what do we do?” he asked.

Kuimba Shiri, which means singing bird in Zimbabwe’s Shona language, was closed for more than three months. It’s the longest time the bird sanctuary, located in one of the global sites protected under the United Nations Convention on Wetlands, has been shut.

On a recent weekday, the only sound of life at the place usually teeming with children on school trips was that of singing birds perched on the edges of large enclosures. Horses, zebras and sheep fed on grass and weeds on the lakeshore.

A parrot standing on a flower pot at the entrance repeatedly shouted “Hello!”

“He misses people, especially the children,” said Strafford, who establishe­d Kuimba Shiri on the 30-acre spot on Chivero, the main reservoir for Harare. Now it is home to many rare species including falcons, flamingos and vultures.

“This place is a dream place for me,” he said. Things turned nightmaris­h, however, when then President, the late Robert Mugabe, launched an often-violent land redistribu­tion programme in which farms owned by whites were seized for redistribu­tion to landless Blacks in 2000.

Animal sanctuarie­s were not spared and Kuimba Shiri was targeted “30 to 40 times,” said Strafford. Eventually, the sanctuary was endorsed by Mugabe and returned to a measure of stability.

In 2009, Zimbabwe’s economy collapsed as hyperinfla­tion reached 500 billion percent, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

The sanctuary struggled to make ends meet. Many birds starved to death while those that could fend for themselves were released into the wild.

“We sold our vehicles and a tractor to feed the birds. When it really got desperate, we had to kill our horses,” he said.

Now, a decade later, Strafford is again being forced to sell some items as coronaviru­s and a new economic crisis take their toll. A land excavator, a boat, a truck, a tractor and sheep are among the items he hopes to urgently sell.

But there is some hope. As Zimbabwe relaxes some of its restrictio­ns, the sanctuary is now able to open to limited numbers of visitors. On a recent weekend, Strafford displayed the talents of his trained falcons and other raptors to a small group for the first time since March.

Strafford enthusiast­ically described the various traits of the birds and supervised as a barn owl perched on a five-year-old boy’s gloved hand.

“Everything got to start afresh,” he said after the show. “I have started training the birds again. We are beginning to fly again!” — AP

 ??  ?? Gary Strafford interacts with a parrot at his bird sanctuary, Kuimba Shiri
Gary Strafford interacts with a parrot at his bird sanctuary, Kuimba Shiri

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