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Man Versus Beast in Remote
Corner of Rwanda
Heather Murdock,
VOA | Akagera National Park,
Rwanda
Posted on Friday, September 27, 2011
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Nearly
seventeen years after civil war and genocide
devastated Rwanda, the country is mostly peaceful,
and the economy is growing fast. But in the eastern
countryside, a kind of conflict still rages. Wild
animals from one of Rwanda’s premier tourist
destinations attack people and destroy crops, while
gangs of poachers rob protected forests. Our
reporter files this story from Akagera National Park
and surrounding villages in Rwanda.
In this remote corner of eastern Rwanda, giraffes
munch quietly on tree-tops while zebras wander in
the hills. Even the wild buffalo, some of the most
dangerous animals in Akagera National Park, stare
lazily as tourists snap pictures.
But in nearby villages, locals say the animals are
not always so peaceful.
Beatha Mushimiyimana is a farmer who grows beans,
sorghum and maize. During the dry season, her
husband went out to search for more food, but he
never came back.
"My husband went to look for something to eat
because of drought," she said. "He went with two
people, and they met a hippopotamus in a sorghum
farm. Around 8pm one of the men came to tell me my
husband had been killed by the hippo. He left
behind three children. "
Park officials say Akagera National Park could be a
major addition to Rwanda’s $200 million plus tourism
business and fastest growing sector. But because of
ongoing human-animal conflict, development in the
park has stalled.
In response, the government of Rwanda is funding a
$2.7 million electric fence to help keep the animals
in and poachers out.
Last year, five people were killed and 15 wounded in
animal attacks near the park. In July, a man was
mauled to death by a buffalo and earlier this
spring, nearly half the elephants in the park
wandered into a nearby village.
Theogene Semugisha oversees social services for
Ndego, a district of almost 15,000 people near the
park. He says animals raid 80 percent of the farms
in this already impoverished district every year.
"The animals come into the farms, tear up the crops
and leave the people with nothing," he said.
Locals complain that despite government promises,
they have not received compensation for lost
property, or lives. Adele Mukansanga grows beans and
maize. She says buffalo and hippos often destroy her
crops.
"Every day they come,' she said. "Since 2006 we have
reported the problem, and wrote letters about how
they are destroying crops. Every year we harvest
nothing and nobody comes to pay for what they have
destroyed."
Like other locals, Adele looks forward to next year
when the fence is expected to be complete. More
tourists will come in, she says, but more
importantly, the animals will stay off of her farm.
(Source: VOA)
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