Connect with us

Conservation Africa News Magazine | African Wildlife & Conservation News

Conservation Africa News Magazine | African Wildlife & Conservation News

Wildlife Conservation Research – As South Africa Eases Lockdown, Eco-Tourism Community Fears for Future


Wildlife Research

Wildlife Conservation Research – As South Africa Eases Lockdown, Eco-Tourism Community Fears for Future

If visitors do not return to the Makuleke Concession in the Kruger National Park this year, community members warn they will lose the gains they have made in recent years For the Makuleke people of South Africa’s far northeast, the country’s COVID-19 lockdown has brought back memories of the poverty and hunger they thought they…

Wildlife Conservation Research – As South Africa Eases Lockdown, Eco-Tourism Community Fears for Future

Wildlife Conservation Research –

If visitors do not return to the Makuleke Concession in the Kruger National Park this year, community members warn they will lose the gains they have made in recent years

For the Makuleke people of South Africa’s far northeast, the country’s COVID-19 lockdown has brought back memories of the poverty and hunger they thought they had overcome decades ago.

The once-landless Makuleke have made a sustainable living running eco-tourism activities in the famous Kruger National Park since the early 2000s, on land the community reclaimed in a historic legal case.

But much of that progress could be laid to waste by the coronavirus pandemic, they warn.

“Before we won the land and tourism started, life was not easy,” said Godfrey Baloyi, a Makuleke member and general manager of RETURN Africa, which runs accommodation and safaris in the park.

“No jobs, no nothing. It was like now; people are struggling,” he said.

After more than two months of strict lockdown to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus, South Africa’s national parks service, SANParks, announced in June it would soon start reopening some facilities, in line with new government rules.

But much of the damage has been done, say the Makuleke people who spoke with the Thomson Reuters Foundation. Many fear the community might never bounce back from the sudden, devastating loss of business.

“I don’t think anybody could have expected these circumstances,” said Lamson Maluleke, a community leader and member of the Makuleke Communal Property Association (CPA). It owns land belonging to about 2,000 Makuleke who were removed from their ancestral land and their descendants.

“It is affecting the community big-time.”

CONSERVATION WIN

The Makuleke were forcibly evicted from their land in the late 1960s, when the then-apartheid regime decided to expand Kruger all the way to the border with Zimbabwe.

The families were relocated to villages outside the park, where they survived through subsistence farming and selling corn and groundnut crops, or left for Johannesburg to find work, explained Sydney Shibambu, administration officer for the CPA.

“It was very, very difficult,” he said.

In 1998, the Makuleke won a legal battle to reclaim 24,000 hectares (59,300 acres) of their land, becoming one of the few indigenous communities to successfully take back land in Kruger.

Instead of moving back into the protected area, they entered a landmark agreement with the South African government to develop eco-tourism in what is now called the Makuleke Concession, with the revenue feeding back into the community.

The remote area, with the Limpopo River to the north and the Luvuvhu River to the south, contains as much as 75% of the biodiversity in the Kruger park, which covers almost 2 million hectares in total.

Under the agreement, the Makuleke received the sole right to operate hotels, lodges and game drives within their territory, which is only open to a select few companies.

“Since then, things economically have changed for us,” said Baloyi of RETURN Africa, one of the three concessionaires that operate in the area.

UNCERTAIN FUTURE

But the coronavirus lockdown has cut off the Makuleke community’s source of income, pushing businesses in the conservancy to the brink of collapse and causing some families who had been earning a good living for years to turn to aid.

Usually in June, in the peak season, RETURN Africa would have hired more than 60 people to run its guesthouse, tented camps and walking safaris, Baloyi noted. But this year, only about 10 staff have been brought on to maintain the facilities.

It has also had to temporarily stop using the local Makuleke service providers it relies on for uniforms, linen, upholstery and transport, Baloyi added.

These financial cuts are far reaching in a community where one income often supports three or four families, he said.

The businesses in the Makuleke Concession pay the CPA a fee based on a percentage of their gross income, explained Maluleke, the community leader.

This money benefits all the association’s members, helping fund development projects and educational resources.

But with business ground to a halt, only an agreed minimum amount is being paid into the CPA’s coffers, Maluleke said.

In April and May, SANParks distributed food and water to vulnerable communities bordering the country’s national parks, including Kruger, in an attempt to alleviate some of the stresses experienced by families who rely on tourism for income.

The agency, together with the SANParks Honorary Rangers, a volunteer group, and the United Nations Development Programme, spent 13 million rand ($745,000) on food parcels, water tanks and hygiene products for 7,500 families around the country.

The Makuleke were not included in the first round of aid, and SANParks’ acting head of communications, Rey Thakhuli, said the money had now been depleted.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Top Stories

Conservation Job in South Africa
Volunteering In Africa And Enrich Your World 2020
Wildlife Photography
Himalayan Goral - Spending an entire afternoon with Brown Gorals
Snowy Owl Rockstar - Most Unmistakable Owls

Conservation Awareness

Snowy Owl Rockstar – Most Unmistakable Owls

By October 14, 2020
Wildlife Conservation Awareness – First Clone of Endangered Przewalski’s Horse Born in Conservation Effort to Save the Species
Importance of wildlife conservation – The intellectual vacuity of New Scientist’s evolution issue: 4. The supposed importance of genetic drift in evolution
Importance of wildlife conservation – How do giraffes and elephants alter the African Savanna landscape?
Benefits of wildlife conservation – Houston Botanic Garden Officially Opens, Showcasing Bayou City’s Biodiversity in New Living Museum for Plants
Importance of wildlife conservation in points – Superfrogs in the city: 150 year impact of urbanization and agriculture on the European Common Frog
Benefits of wildlife conservation – U.S. News & World Report Announces the 2021 Best Colleges Rankings
Benefits of wildlife conservation – New method adds and subtracts for sustainability’s true measure
Benefits of wildlife conservation – Wyndham Destinations Presenting Today at the J.P. Morgan Management Access Forum; Provides Operational Updates

Tags

Conservation Africa News

COP27 must deliver climate finance where it is needed

By January 22, 2022
Conservation Job in South Africa
How to get a conservation job?
Volunteering In Africa And Enrich Your World 2020
Wildlife Photography
Himalayan Goral - Spending an entire afternoon with Brown Gorals
Snowy Owl Rockstar - Most Unmistakable Owls

Conservation Awareness

Snowy Owl Rockstar – Most Unmistakable Owls

By October 14, 2020
Endangered Species - Common species mirror rare animals response to global change
Wildlife Conservation Jobs – Coronavirus: 300 self-isolating after outbreak linked to charity football match
Wildlife Conservation Jobs – Founder of ‘pro-Brexit’ think tank ‘buys EU passport via Malta’
Wildlife Conservation Jobs – Tony Abbott: Former Australian PM made senior UK trade adviser despite outcry
Wildlife Conservation Awareness – First Clone of Endangered Przewalski’s Horse Born in Conservation Effort to Save the Species
Endangered Animals – Congrats, humans: We’ve saved up to 48 species from extinction
Endangered Animals – Wildlife trade threats: The importance of genetic data in saving an endangered species
To Top