|
http://news.bbc.co.uk/earth/hi/earth_news/newsid_9451000/9451460.stm
Goldman Prize: Zimbabwe's rhino rescuer honoured
By Victoria Gill
Science and nature reporter, BBC News
Raoul du Toit, a Zimbabwe-based conservationist who has taken a
very direct approach to saving Africa's Critically Endangered
black rhino, has been selected as one of the six winners of this
year's Goldman Environmental Prize.
The prize, founded by American philanthropist Richard Goldman,
is the world's largest award for grassroots environmentalists.
One recipient from each of the world's six inhabited continents
will receive the $150,000 (£92,000) prize.
Mr du Toit's fellow recipients include a biologist who initiated
a local movement to stop industrial pollution flowing into an
Indonesian river that provides water to three million people,
and an activist who has fought to protect a remote island off
Russia's far east from being damaged by an oil development
project.
Devastated population
Raoul du Toit founded the Lowveld Rhino Conservancy Project in
1990, whilst he was working with the World Wildlife Foundation.
He is now director of the Lowveld Rhino Trust, and his work over
more than two decades has saved Zimbabwe's black rhino
population from being permanently decimated by poaching.
"In the late 1980s, Zimbabwe had Africa's largest black rhino
population - about 1,500 animals," he explained.
"But cross-border poaching by Zambian gangs devastated the
populations and by 1992 rhino numbers had fallen to under 600.
"We wanted to put these rhinos somewhere safer."
Throughout the project, he and his colleagues moved black and
white rhinos away from the border into a range of conservancies
in the Lowveld region.
Since the area was home to many large cattle ranches, he worked
with the ranchers - in particular in helping them install
perimeter fencing, to allow them to farm alongside the vast open
plains that the rhinos need to range.
This was almost an immediate success; the thriving wildlife
tourism industry meant that protecting rhinos was profitable for
the private sector.
Breeding projects were set up and the rhino population recovered
dramatically.
But in 2000, the private sector strength of these areas became
their weakness.
Chaos and opportunity
Robert Mugabe's government turned ranching operations in
Zimbabwe upside down.
"With the draconian land reform policies, the private ranching
areas were subject to nationalisation - and subsistence farming
expanded into the conservancies," Mr du Toit recalled.
"With the economic decline and political insecurity, the rhinos
weren't able to pay their way any more."
Though many conservation projects collapsed as professionals
left the country, Mr du Toit has continued his work.
"Politically, we are in a mess right now and we need to get out
of it, but in times of chaos there's also some opportunity," he
told BBC News.
"Because we don't have a country that's rigidly governed -
that's set its own development goals - we can set out our own
path and make alliances with people who want to plan for the
future of Zimbabwe."
A reduction in law enforcement, though, has coincided with an
increase in poaching in the formerly well-protected area.
The animals are slaughtered to supply the the illegal trade in
rhino horn, which is a rare and prized commodity fetching high
prices in Asia.
Mr du Toit's solution is to work with local communities in
Zimbabwe, to make rhino conservation a self-sustaining business
once again.
"We want to buy rhinos from the commercial operations and give
them to local communities," he explained.
He envisions the money generated - from, for example,
international development funds and from wildlife tourism -
going into a trust fund that would pay a sort of dividend for
these locally-owned rhinos.
"So we would be able to pay people every time a rhino is born in
their community."
The Lowveld conservancies are now home to more than 400 black
rhinos, 7% of the entire global population.
And Mr du Toit is optimistic about the future.
He says it is "a completely inaccurate cliché" to portray rhinos
as dinosaurs that are due for extinction.
Mr du Toit concluded: "They are biologically capable of thriving
and contributing to wildlife-based tourism to the extent that
they definitely have a future in Africa if poaching can be
controlled."
Environmental heroes
The Goldman Prize is in its 22nd year. The six winners will be
awarded the prize at a ceremony at the San Francisco Opera House
in the US on Monday.
This year's other winners are:
• Francisco Pineda, from El Salvador, led a citizens' movement
that stopped a gold mine from destroying the country's water
resources. He now lives under constant threat of assassination
and has 24-hour police protection.
• Dmitry Lisitsyn, from Russia, who has fought to protect the
threatened ecosystem of Sakhalin Island in Russia's far east
from being damaged by a large petroleum development project.
• Ursula Sladek, from Germany, created her country's first
cooperatively-owned renewable power company.
• Prigi Arisandi, from Indonesia, initiated a local movement to
stop industrial pollution from flowing into a river that
provides water to three million people.
• Hilton Kelley, from the US, has fought for poor communities
affected by pollution from petrochemical and hazardous waste
facilities on the Gulf coast of Texas.
|