NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

It is high time Africans start talking conservati­on

- Kaddu Sebunya is chief executive officer of the African Wildlife Foundation

THE ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic is a direct consequenc­e of our broken relationsh­ip with nature. Scientists have long been warning us that humanity’s destructio­n of nature, left unchecked, will result in the spread of deadly diseases, droughts, famines and other disasters.

For decades, amid the hustle and bustle of our daily lives, these warnings fell on deaf ears.

But we no longer have the luxury to ignore the deep interconne­ction between human health and nature.

The continuous loss of biodiversi­ty is threatenin­g the existence of all living beings, including us.

This is where conservati­on comes into play. Conservati­on is the strongest weapon we have to protect the planet we call home.

But while conservati­on is crucial for our survival, its importance is not being communicat­ed to masses in an efficient way, especially where it matters the most — in Africa.

In Africa, the conservati­on story has long been told from an external perspectiv­e – the perspectiv­e of science, and the West.

The African peoples, cultures, heritage, knowledge and aspiration­s have only been a small part of the conversati­on, an afterthoug­ht.

We need to change this, and reclaim our role in the fight to save the planet and the future of humans.

Africa’s human population is expected to double by 2050. That would be 2,5 billion people, meaning more than a quarter of the world’s people will be in Africa.

And almost 70% of Africans will be under the age of 40. This will undoubtedl­y add to the momentum of the continent’s developmen­t.

But nature is already being destroyed at unpreceden­ted rates in Africa in the name of developmen­t.

The way we produce and consume food and energy, coupled with the blatant disregard for the environmen­t entrenched in our economic system, have already brought the natural world of the continent to a breaking point.

A rapid increase in population is likely to speed up this destructio­n.

However, it is still possible to build a future in which the continent’s biodiversi­ty is protected, its peoples are fed, industries are running, and its economies are sustainabl­e and prosperous. To achieve this, we need to make conservati­on a primary concern for all Africans.

And perhaps more importantl­y, we need to realise that we are not the only Africans.

It is arrogant for us to think other species sharing this continent with us should pay the price for our developmen­t.

Giraffes, for example, are only found in Africa, and they are as African as we are.

They have a right to exist as much as we do. And their survival is tied to our survival. Africans can only truly understand this, if they are exposed to content underlinin­g the importance of biodiversi­ty and conservati­on frequently. It is no secret that television programmes, newspaper articles and social media determine what we talk about in our homes, workplaces and local eateries. We are what we watch and read.

This is why it is high time the media — both traditiona­l and social — steps up to its role of setting the agenda and turns its focus to what really matters: the environmen­t.

The people who have the ability to reach millions of Africans on a daily basis and shape the narratives in African households also wield the power to ensure that wildlife thrives in modern Africa.

I know that content exists, but we need to see more of it. If Africans begin to see more content on nature and wildlife, the conversati­on will definitely begin to change.

Especially if other Africans, who are equally invested in the wellbeing and the developmen­t of the continent, tell them conservati­on is important.

Today, young Africans, who stand to lose the most as a result of nature’s destructio­n, dominate the media — both social and traditiona­l — on the continent.

They are members of the most educated generation Africa has ever had.

They travelled more than their parents ever did and the internet has opened the world to them in ways that previous generation­s could not even dream of.

They are innovative, technologi­cally savvy, and even braver than the generation­s that liberated us from colonialis­m.

And they are the best chance we have to change the way the continent talks about and perceives conservati­on.

They are the best chance we have to ensure Africa and all its inhabitant­s — human or otherwise — have a future.

Can you imagine, the impact Nelson Mandela, Kwame Nkuruma, John Nyerere, Patrice Lumumba and other renowned young Pan African leaders would have generated, if they had WhatsApp, Facebook, Twitter or Instagram?

They were also young when they started their struggle. Today’s youth is perhaps facing an even bigger challenge than they were — but they also have more power.

If there is one thing that I hope that the COVID-19 pandemic can teach us all, it is that the health of humans is one and the same as the health of nature and wildlife.

When this pandemic is finally over, we cannot afford to return to “normal” and continue ignoring the destructio­n we have been causing in the name of developmen­t. And it is up to the African youth to keep us all on the right path.

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 ??  ?? Kaddu Sebunya
Kaddu Sebunya

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