Bush meat extraction rose considerably in Central Africa
Cambridge,
UK, October 16, 2009 - New analytical techniques have revealed that
the scale of bush meat trade in Central Africa may be much larger
than originally thought according to a study published today by
TRAFFIC, wildlife trade monitoring network. The study strongly
supports the view that the current situation surrounding wild animals
hunting in Central African rainforests is precarious. The analysis
reveals that, bush meat extraction rose considerably in the Congo
Basin between 1990 and 2005, despite the overall decrease in forest
cover in Central Africa. To better picture the extent of the
situation, please do have a look at the photograph (right) presenting
animals piled up on the MINFOF' esplanade in Cameroun during the
Operation "coup de poing". There were 45 living animals, 228
remains, and 42 various pieces, in October 16, 2009.
In
addition, this publication follows the workshop for the development
of the national strategy and action plan on bush meat held in
Kinshasa in September 23-24, 2009. According to the organizers, this
workshop witnessed a great national, sub regional and international
mobilization. At the end of hard exchanges, the workshop participants
could formulate " three major axes on which the future strategy
and action plan on bush meat in DRC would be structured: (1)
improvement of the effectiveness on the legal and institutional
framework, (2) initiation and promotion of alternative activities to
meat of bush consumption and marketing (3) awakening the awareness
on the bush meat issues by all the parties. Axes of monitoring and
capacity building have been qualified as transverse." The
photograph on the left presents officials (from left to right): Mr.
Dieudonné MBAYO (UICN), Mr. Albert LIKUNDE (Secretary General
MECNT), Mr. Petrus NDONGALA-VIENGELE (MECNT), Mr. Idi Omari India
(ADGA-ICCN), Mr. Stephan RINGUET (International TRAFFIC) during the
opening ceremony in September 23, 2009. Photograph © Eva Paule
Mouzong/TRAFFIC.
Earlier
in September 18, 2009, TRAFFIC received a funding from France for the
monitoring of bush meat trade in Central Africa. This funding was
granted within the framework of an agreement signed between the
French Government and IUCN to support sustainable management of
biodiversity. TRAFFIC which is a monitoring network of wildlife trade
is a joint programme of French Government and UICN. TRAFFIC's
mission aims at ensuring that wild animals and plants trade does not
threaten nature conservation.
For more information please consult the following link:
New analysis sounds alarm over scale of bushmeat trade in Central Africa"
Un atelier pour l'élaboration de la stratégie et du plan d'action national sur la viande de brousse
"French Government supports bushmeat monitoring in Central Africa"
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