George Obulutsa, Yahoo News 22 Jan 08;
NAIROBI (Reuters) - Hungry refugees in Tanzania are eating chimpanzees and other endangered species in order to supplement their meager diet, an international conservation group said on Tuesday.
Traffic said refugees living near national parks in northwestern Tanzania were also illegally hunting buffalo, topi, eland, elephant and waterbuck.
"The scale of wild meat consumption in East African refugee camps has helped conceal the failure of the international community to meet basic refugee needs," said George Jambiya, the report's lead author.
Traffic, whose report was based on studies carried out in 2005 and 2006, said refugees were being denied adequate nutrition and then punished when caught seeking bush meat.
"Something has to be wrong if refugees, who have run from guns in their home country, then find themselves fleeing wildlife rangers' firearms in their search for food," said report co-author Simon Milledge.
"Relief agencies are turning a blind eye to the real cause of the poaching and illegal trade: a lack of meat protein in refugees' rations," he said.
Traffic said game consumption soared to an estimated 7.5 tons of illegal bush meat per week in two refugee camps in the mid-1990s, when refugee numbers in Tanzania hit a peak of more than 800,000.
The report did not give more recent consumption figures.
The illegal bush meat trade has also caused a drop in government revenues from lucrative licensed sport hunting and game viewing, it said, adding that aid and conservation groups should work more closely together to help reverse the damage.
Since the east African nation's independence in 1961, more than 20 major refugee camps have been established close to game reserves, national parks or other protected areas. Of these, 13 still existed in 2005, Traffic said.
According to the U.N. refugee agency Tanzania hosted 11 camps in January 2007, housing 287,061 refugees, down from 350,590 in 2005.
Most of the refugees fled conflict in Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo from as far back as the 1960s, and Rwanda in the 1990s.
(Editing by Helen Nyambura-Mwaura and Jon Boyle)
Refugee link to wildlife decline
Richard Black, BBC News 22 Jan 08;
Conservation groups say they have found an unusual threat to East Africa's wildlife - hunting by hungry refugees.
A report from the wildlife trade monitoring body Traffic says wild meat is covertly traded, cooked and consumed in Tanzanian refugee camps.
Traffic suspects species affected may include chimpanzee, buffalo and zebra.
Tanzania hosts more refugees than any other African nation, a legacy of conflicts in Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The UN says there are more than half a million refugees in the country, mainly living in camps near the western border.
The border is also home to important wildlife refuges such as Gombe National Park, which achieved international fame as the site of Jane Goodall's pioneering studies of chimp behaviour.
Basic 'failure'
In its 60-page report, Traffic says the refugees are turning to wildlife because agencies supplying food are not providing meat.
"The scale of wild meat consumption in East African refugee camps has helped conceal the failure of the international community to meet basic refugee needs," said the report's principal author Dr George Jambiya.
"Relief agencies are turning a blind eye to the real cause of poaching and illegal trade - a lack of meat protein in refugees' rations."
The World Food Programme (WFP), which supplies food to more than 200,000 refugees in Tanzania, said it did not believe there was a big problem.
A survey conducted last year showed little response to a question on whether refugees were obtaining food from hunting, gathering or fishing.
"The refugees are given a balanced diet of cereals, dried beans, vitamin-fortified blended food, vegetable oil fortified with Vitamin A and iodised salt," a WFP spokesman told BBC News.
"To continue to meet the nutritional requirements of the refugees with meat as suggested by the report would require substituting canned meat for the much less expensive beans that we currently provide."
This would almost double the budget for food provision, WFP calculates.
Tale of decline
Traffic admits that the real scale of the hunting problem is not known, but offers a raft of observational evidence and first-person testimony to back its case.
In 1994, when intense ethnic fighting in Rwanda drove an estimated 600,000 refugees into the area of Tanzania surrounding Burigi National Park, wildlife in the park declined sharply.
Buffalo numbers fell from about 2,670 to just 44. Roan antelope declined from 466 to 15 and zebra from 6,552 to 606, while the estimated population of 324 Lichtenstein's Hartebeest, a type of antelope, vanished completely.
Similar trends have been found in other parks near camps.
And when camps have closed, numbers have often recovered.
Long-time residents of camps, meanwhile, told researchers that a clandestine network of hunters and processors continues to supply illegally caught wild meat.
Traffic, which is a joint operation of the World Conservation Union (IUCN) and WWF, recommends that refugee agencies and the Tanzanian government look for ways to increase the supply of meat protein to the refugees.
Livestock rearing, ranching of wild species, and regulated hunting are all measures that could help provide a sustainable supply of meat in some areas, the agency says.
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