SUB-SAHARAN AFRICAN NETWORK FOR ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLIANCE AND ENFORCEMENT ESTABLISHED AT INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE


Environmental Panorama
International
April of 2008


ISSUED ON 11 APRIL 2008 - Sub-Saharan African Network for Environmental Compliance and Enforcement Established at International Conference

The 8th International Conference on Environmental Compliance and Enforcement culminated in the formation of an informal Sub-Saharan African Network for Environmental Compliance and Enforcement.

This informal regional network was founded on 10 April 2008 at the 8th International Network for Environmental Compliance and Enforcement (INECE) Conference in Cape Town, South Africa by environmental compliance and enforcement officials and experts from South Africa, Cameroon, Ghana, Nigeria, Botswana, Uganda, Tanzania as well as Kenya.

The objective of the network is to enhance environmental compliance and enforcement in the great countries of Sub-Saharan Africa by sharing information and experience.

Eastern, Southern, Central and Western Africa represent the four subregions into which the network has been divided.

Through the International Network for Environmental Compliance and Enforcement (INECE) network members can register online. At the national level key documents such as training materials, policies, legislation, information on technology, inspection report formats and case studies will be identified.

The 8th INECE conference commenced on 05 April and drew to a close today, 11 April 2008. It saw 200 participants from more than 60 developing and developed countries converge in Cape Town, South Africa, to affirm the benefits of environmental compliance and enforcement, to highlight progress made by the network, and press for further actions to improve compliance and enforcement around the world.

Nobel Peace Prize winner and world renowned environmentalist, Wangari Maathai in a video message to the conference today (11 April) said that laws are important but compliance to laws is more important as we cannot have sustainable development without compliance. She emphasised that compliance is part of good governance and effective rule of law - one is not effective on its own, both law and compliance were needed.

Mathaai highlighted the need for protection of forests in Africa. She said that there was a need to look at the role of forests in climate change mitigation. Mathaai emphasized that it cannot be more important to plant an extra tree than to protect the one that is standing.

In the Cape Town Conference Statement delivered by The Dutch Inspector General for International Enforcement Cooperation, Gerard Wolters several key outcomes actions were realized and will be integrated into a post conference programme of action. Some of the key actions include:

a. Communicate that environmental compliance and enforcement programs create value across all areas of society: public value through strengthened rule of law; protected ecosystem goods and services; improved human health and private value through increased investor confidence; reduced business risks; stimulated innovation; increased competitiveness; and new jobs and markets.

b. Encourage the development and growth of environmental compliance and enforcement networks in the Sub-Saharan region of Africa.

c. Promote transnational and intergovernmental cooperation for the management and protection of newly established transboundary conservation parks in Sub-Saharan Africa.

d. Build an informal community of practitioners that strategically manages environmental compliance and enforcement programs.

e. Encourage the use of performance measurement, including indicators of effective environmental compliance and enforcement.

f. Enhance national capacity for detecting violations, emphasizing practical tools, including technological developments, to strengthen compliance and enforcement programs.

g. Improve national compliance with, and enforcement of, laws protecting biodiversity and habitat, and develop further tools to enhance international compliance with multilateral environmental agreements.

h. Support the further development of networks, such as the Network for Environmental Compliance Training Professionals and the Seaport Network to build capacity and curtail the illegal movement of goods, including hazardous waste, chemicals, ozone depleting substances, and flora and fauna.

i. Develop recommendations for compliance and enforcement strategies and mechanisms for addressing climate change within existing and future climate regimes.

j. Promote compliance with measures that restrict emissions that contribute to climate change, including greenhouse gases, ozone depleting substances, and black carbon (or soot), and that protect carbon sinks, including forests and soils, with emphasis on measures that produce strong co-benefits, such as improvements in public health and ecosystem services.

k. Apply environmental compliance and enforcement tools to protect ecosystems and their services as a basis for climate change adaptation.

“Environmental protection is nothing less than protecting the very sources of life - land, air, water, and ecosystems. These also form the basis of all economic activities. As such, these environmental resources must be given the highest priority in the global agenda of humankind. The laws that conserve, protect, and restore these elements of life must be implemented and their compliance assured. The rule of law is the basis for good governance and sustainable development,” said Wolters.
For further information on INECE visit : http://www.environment.gov.za/HotIssues/2008/INECE/INECE.html or www.inece.org
Sonnyboy Bapela, Chief Director: Regulatory Services
Melissa Fourie, Director: Enforcement

+ More

Deputy Minister's Intervention on the Farm Owner & Farm Dwellers Conflict in Hoedspruit game farm

14 April 2008 - Media Statement - STATEMENT BY DEPUTY MINISTER, MS REJOICE MABUDAFHASI, ON FARM OWNER AND FARM DWELLERS CONFLICT IN HOEDSPRUIT

MONDAY, 14 APRIL 2008: The Deputy Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism, Ms Rejoice Mabudafhasi, has today met with aggrieved members of Mokoena family whose deceased family member has been denied burial rights in Welverdien 241 KT game farm in Hoedspruit by Hannes Wessels, the farm owner. Mr. Wessels refused the burial on the farm despite the deceased having been born in the farm and never had any other home. Burial has been kept on hold for more than three weeks.

When reacting to the conflict Ms Mabudafhasi said, “As government we cannot allow a situation where our people’s rights are violated in the name of tourism. We encourage responsible tourism which espouses everyone’s constitutional right to dignity and respect. This practice of gross human rights violation is very bad for tourism as it creates negative about our beautiful country. Tourists will never be interested in visiting areas where poor people are exploited and ill-treated by rich people who are pursuing narrow self-enriching activities.

This situation is very disgusting and works against government’s genuine efforts for nation building, reconciliation, social-cohesion and moral regeneration.

What attracts tourists to visit our country is our cultural diversity and ability to remain united as one nation despite the racial divisions of the past. Those who still have an apartheid mentality of humiliating poor people must be stopped from doing so. I therefore strongly urge all tourists not to visit this area and other places where the owners have no respect for other fellow human beings.

I wish to send a strong message to everyone that South Africa belongs to all of us irrespective of race. The days when racism and shameful treatment of poor black people by white people was tolerated are gone. Government will therefore not allow anyone to undermine the current democratic dispensation through unethical, immoral and unconstitutional behaviour”.

Ms Mabudafhasi also appealed to the Limpopo Land Claims Commission to expedite the processing of a land claim for the Mokoena family on the same property.
Moses Rannditsheni (Media Liaison Officer for the Deputy Minister)

 
 

Source: South African Environmental
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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