Guerrillas threaten gorillas
2005-09-09 13:16
Kinshasa - The continued presence of armed groups in restive eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is hampering efforts to protect dwindling numbers of highly endangered great apes in one their few remaining habitats, conservationists warn.
While the DRC's last cycle of civil war officially ended in 2003, militia fighters and Rwandan Hutu rebels in the dense forests of the east are threatening the survival of primates with sporadic clashes and encroachment.
"The presence of foreign rebel groups is now causing insecurity and stopping us from carrying out censuses and protecting endangered species like the gorilla," said Benoit Kisuki, of the Congo Institute for the Conservation of Nature (ICCN).
The DRC, which is currently hosting an international conference on saving primates from feared imminent extinction, is home to three of the four world's great apes: gorillas, chimpanzees and bonobos - pygmy chimps whose population has been decimated over the past 15 years.
The population of bonobos, which are unique to the DRC, has plummeted from an estimated 100 000 in 1988 to just 10 000, according to Friends of Bonobos.
Deadly conflicts blamed
Conservationists blame deadly cycles of conflict that have engulfed the DRC and surrounding country's as the primary cause for the shrinking great ape habitat.
At the height of the wars, the fighting not only disrupted the placid lives of the apes, killed them or placed them at risk of the bushmeat industry but sent tens of thousands of refugees fleeing into national parks in the east.
"In Virunga park, more than 15 000ha of forest was cleared by some 30 000 refugees, including Rwandans, who fled the 1994 genocide," Kisuki said.
"The conflicts also encouraged the illegal exploitation of natural resources and arms trafficking that fuels poaching," he added.
The Virunga National Park, which covers more than 8 000 square kilometres, straddles the DRC, Rwanda and Uganda and the rebel presence in that area continues to drive gorillas from the forests, said Jean-Claude Kyungu, a researcher at the park.
Apes facing extinction
In addition, unfettered poaching in the DRC forests has intensified the threat despite a takeover of the forests by the army, said Paulin Ngobobo, a scientist with a gorilla conservation group in the DRC.
The great apes conference has gathered representatives from the 23 so-called "great ape range states" and wildlife experts.It is the first at governmental level of the UN-backed Great Apes Survival Project (Grasp), an ambitious scheme launched in Paris in 2003 to sustain and begin to boost their dwindling populations by 2010.
Pressure from disease, war, deforestation and the bushmeat trade, have pushed the "great apes" - highland and lowland gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos in Africa and orangutans in southeast Asia - to the verge of extinction with experts predicting their complete demise by 2055 unless urgent action is taken.
- AFP