ELEVEN (11) BLACK RHINOS RELEASED ONTO KZN COMMUNITY OWNED GAME RESERVE TO BOOST COMMUNITY’S TOURISM ECONOMY

Environmental Panorama
International
November of 2007

 

History was made today when black rhinos were released onto Somkhanda Game Reserve in northern KwaZulu-Natal. Somkhanda is the first community-owned land to become a partner in the WWF/ Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife Black Rhino Range Expansion Project. A total of eleven (11) black rhinos will be released.

Somkhanda Game Reserve is owned by the Gumbi community which successfully claimed five commercial game farms under the Land Restitution process. Rather than turn the whole area into settlement and farming, the community leaders decided to zone their land for economic sustainability. The zones include areas for conservation, development and commercial cattle farming.

“Empowering black communities to become stakeholders is a priority in conservation, and Somkhanda is an example where it is really starting to happen”, said WWF’s Dr Jacques Flamand, leader of the Black Rhino Range Expansion Project.

iNkosi Zebelon Gumbi, head of the Gumbi royal family, explains: “When the land was gone, there were no opportunities. Now there are opportunities. There is work in security protecting animals from poachers. And there is work at the lodges. We have set aside some land for farming and settlement, and some for development projects which will boost the Gumbi economy. We are asking our people to think like businesspeople. We are living in modern times. It is not just building a place and relying on cattle any more. Now we ask people to work and get money.”

But conservation always involves the heart as well as the head. Nathi Gumbi, Director of Somkhanda Game Reserve, says: “When the Gumbis were moved from their land, we had no choice. But thank God the white people who took our land also loved it. So our land is still beautiful. Now we have the land back and we shall also love it and look after it as our ancestors loved it.”

The way the Black Rhino Range Expansion Project works is that the founder population of black rhino - the 11 that are being released now - belong to Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife. When the population grows, then ownership of the offspring is shared 50/50 between the Gumbi community and Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife.

“But the reality is that these animals belong to all of us - to KwaZulu-Natal, to South Africa, to Africa, to our children and our children’s children,” said Rejoice Mabudafhasi, Deputy Minister of the Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism, who attended the release. “They are our heritage, our responsibility, our privilege. The Gumbi leadership has shown the courage and foresight to accept that opportunity and that responsibility and we salute you for that. It may not always be easy. There will be challenges and setbacks. It will be hard work. But it will be worth it. As the first community to become partners in this important project, you are pioneering a way that we hope many others will follow”, the Deputy Minister added.

The black rhino is still critically endangered, although numbers have increased to about 3700, from a low point of around 2500 in the 11000s. The Black Rhino Range Expansion Project supports ongoing protection of existing populations, but also aims to increase land available for black rhino conservation, thus reducing pressure on existing reserves and providing new territory in which the animals can rapidly increase in number. This is done by forming strategic partnerships with landowners within the historic range of the black rhino. The first three partner sites were Mun-ya-wana Game Reserve, Zululand Rhino Reserve and Pongola Game Reserve.

Partnerships, both with private and communal landowners, are essential for the future of conservation, said Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife CEO Khulani Mkhize. “For conservation to grow and thrive in our beautiful country, with all its opportunities and challenges, local communities must become significant stakeholders with a real interest in ensuring the future of conservation. This is an example of that principle in action, and we are proud and excited to be part of it,” he said.

The Black Rhino Range Expansion Project is a partnership between WWF and Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife and is supported by the Mazda Wildlife Fund.
The media is invited to attend and interview the Deputy Minister. For more information, please contact:
Moses Rannditsheni
Media Liaison Officer for the Deputy Minister
Dept of Environmental Affairs and Tourism

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New name for SA 1st World Heritage Site

Media Statement - STATEMENT BY THE MINISTER OF ENVIRONMENTAL AFFAIRS AND TOURISM, MARTHINUS VAN SCHALKWYK, 1 NOVEMBER 2007

WEDNESDAY, 31 OCTOBER 2007: From today the Greater St Lucia Wetland Park, which became South Africa’s first World Heritage Site followed by Robben Island and the Cradle of Humankind in 1999, has a new but history-rich name.

After an extensive 2 year consultation process, the iSimangaliso Wetland Park was approved by Cabinet and gazetted on May 11 this year.

In 2005 we decided for several reasons to embark on finding a new name:

The consolidated 220 000 ha Wetland Park includes more than a third of the KwaZulu-Natal coastline (10% of RSA), and jewels like Kosi Bay, Lake Sibaya, Sodwana Bay, uMkhuze Game Reserve, False Bay, Fanies Island, Charters Creek, Lake St Lucia, Cape Vidal and Maphelane. This is far larger than the 98ha town of St Lucia
Many people began therefore to feel the Wetland Park had outgrown its original name.
The island country of St Lucia in the Caribbean with its own listed World Heritage Site has a very strong market presence, thus diluting the brand value of our Greater St Lucia Wetland Park, and causing some global confusion.
Following an extensive public consultative process, the name was gazetted in terms of Sections 1 and 11 of the World Heritage Convention Act, 1999 on May 11 this year, effective from November 1.

The name Lake St Lucia, named by the Portuguese in about1459, as well as other branded and indigenous names like uMkhuze, Maphelane, Lake Sibiya, Sodwana Bay, Cape Vidal and Kosi Bay will remain. The word iSimangaliso has a rich historical context. uJeqe was King uShaka’s insila or aide, the keeper of the King’s secrets and customarily buried with him. When uShaka died in 1828, uJeqe fled to avoid this fate.

He wandered east into Thongaland, which includes today Wetland Park, and later returned, saying: “I saw wonders and miracles in the flat land and the lakes of Thonga”

From this followed an isiZulu saying: “If you have seen miracles, you have seen what uJeqe saw: Ubone isimanga esabonwa wuJeqe kwelama Thonga”. So uJeqe could be regarded as one of the first tourists to visit what is now the iSimangaliso Wetland Park and to appreciate its miracles and spiritual values - recognised 171 years later by the 176 UNESCO member countries who supported its World Heritage Site listing. These include Africa’s largest estuarine system, the tallest forested dunes, the most southerly coral reefs, the renowned turtle-nesting beaches and the marine canyons in which South Africa’s first living coelacanths were found.

The description of Wetland Park has therefore been retained and linked with the isiZulu word. We are truly excited to have this new name for 2010 and beyond.

The iSimangaliso Authority - as it will also be renamed - is launching an imaginative modern icon to launch the branding/marketing drive to take this unique and beautiful region to new heights. iSimangaliso Wetland Park Authority CEO Andrew Zaloumis says “We are happy to have a name at last. We can now, together with our partners and communities, get on with the job of building a strong market presence for the Park”

A NEW ICON FOR THE iSIMANGALISO WETLAND PARK

Along with the new name comes a new icon for the Simangaliso Wetland Park to be used in signage, branding, marketing and communications.

Several factors influenced its design:

World Heritage values including geographical uniqueness, spiritual values and sense of place
The perfect balance and proportions within nature
The role people and cultures have played - and continue to play: local communities, employees, and visitors
The interaction of people with nature and the yin and yang balance
Rationale

Water - one of the most basic components of life. Evoking a distinctive, globally valued, landscape of clear seas, lakes, pans, rivers and estuaries.

Nature - a mathematical or geometric pattern is inherent in natural design including 60 million year-old fossil ammonites, unfurling fern frond, the way a chameleons’ tail curls.

Sun - life is ultimately dependent on energy from the sun, which is captured by green plants which are the basis of the food chain for all life on earth.

People - vibrant and directional. People are an integral part of the landscape and future of the park

The triangle formed by the red sides and yellow bow represents a dynamic, forward-moving organization.

Diamond shape - a pattern providing great structural strength, symbolising power strength, brilliance and unparalleled beauty. It also echoes the diamond shape in World Heritage icon.

But, like the ‘sense of place’ identified with the iSimangaliso Wetland Park during the mining debate, the icon can mean different things to different people.

Use of the new name, other than as a geographic description in a sentence, is regulated by the iSimangaliso Wetland Authority. Permission to use the name, logo and brand in any other context has to be obtained beforehand in writing from the Authority.
Riaan Aucamp (Minister's Spokesperson)

 
 

Source: South African Environmental (http://www.environment.gov.za)
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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