FEMALE RANGERS BREAKING GENDER BARRIERS

Environmental Panorama
International
December of 2011


Sidonie Asseme never succeeded in persuading her father to let her join the military. That was her desire in 2005 when she passed a test to join the Cameroon army. He had wanted his daughter to be a nurse, in order to provide much needed health care to people in their village in eastern Cameroon.

But Asseme’s mind was set on serving, and somewhere in her there was a silent voice that prodded her on. So in 2006, she secretly went in for the recruitment of game rangers without the knowledge of her father.

“Daddy was unpleasantly surprised when he learnt I was already taking training as a forest ranger,” says Asseme, now aged 35. “Today he upholds my effort and says he is very proud of me.”

Although rewarding, it has been a difficult journey, Asseme says. “We went through very difficult training. There were times I felt like giving up, but that omniscient voice kept urging me on.”

In collaboration with Cameroon's Ministry of Forestry and Wildlife, WWF helped finance the recruitment and training of Asseme and other rangers. Through the WWF programme, she and her colleagues were taught how to use sophisticated mapping, global positioning, and tracking technologies, and how to plan anti-poaching surveillance missions. The rangers have also received equipment, such as uniforms and vehicles, provide by WWF.

After training, Asseme was deployed to a town near Cameroon’s Lobéké National Park, where she has participated in several anti-poaching operations, and helps teach residents about the value of their environment.

“I confiscated four ivory tusks and a panther skin,” Asseme says. “The poacher pleaded with us saying the ivory tusks did not belong to him.”

A woman of valour, she has contributed to the arrest and detention 15 poachers.

Dangerous work

Like most game rangers working in Central Africa, Asseme has been threatened and assaulted by wildlife criminals.

“Once we were attacked and beaten by poachers in a logging town near Nki National Park. Some local people intervened and rescued us,” said Asseme.

She will never forget the day poachers locked her and three other rangers in a house and threatened to set them on fire.

“We had obtained authorization from the village’s traditional leader to search houses where we suspected ivory tusks had been hidden. But we got encircled by irate youths inside one of the houses for four hours. They threatened to kill us,” Asseme says, “I was really frightened.”

Using their training the rangers broke free and escaped safely from the village.

The incident did not deter Asseme from continuing her duties as a ranger.

“I had fathomed the risks involved in this job before going for it,” Asseme says, “I hope to continue working as a game ranger for a long time. I love wearing this uniform.

“I was born in the forest and I feel it is a moral obligation to protect the forest and its wildlife,” she says.

Breaking gender barriers

As a female in the ranger profession, Asseme is in the minority, but she says her gender does not affect her work.

“I do not feel any different working with men. We eat together, sleep in the same tents, and take our bath in the same river,” she says. “Moreover, we underwent the same training.”

“She is more than a woman,” says Ngonda Arlen, one of Asseme’s few female colleagues. “In the forest she walks at lightning speed and hardly gets tired.”

Asseme is not known as someone who complains, but she does have one request. “We need better arms and logistical support to enable us do our jobs. If I meet the Minister of Forestry and Wildlife this is the main message I will put to him.”

+ More

Document pulps APP’s tiger sanctuary claims

Pekanbaru, Sumatra – A document released today by WWF and partners confirms that a supplier to paper giant Asia Pulp and Paper is clear felling natural tropical forests the company designated as tiger sanctuary.

The document throws into doubt APP claims on Tuesday that current clear cutting activities of supplier PT Ruas Utama Jaya (RUJ) were taking place narrowly outside rather than inside the Senepis Tiger Sanctuary.

The APP document, “Proposal for Rationalization of Senepis-Buluhala Sumatra Tiger Conservation Area”, shows Sinarmas Forestry (APP) and RUJ executives signing off on sanctuary boundaries that clearly put current large scale clearing inside the boundaries.
“APP really needs to come clean on its incredible shrinking tiger sanctuary,” said Aditya Bayunanda, pulp & paper coordinator of WWF-Indonesia. “In its media campaigns APP seeks major credit for its minor contribution of about 8000 ha to the 106,000 ha tiger sanctuary.

“And now, according to the map signed off by its executives, it is busily clearing and draining even that minor contribution.”

As recently as 2010, APP was claiming that the presence of its supplier’s concessions on the sanctuary boundaries would provide additional protection. Satellite imagery however shows that huge areas of dense tiger forest that government and scientists had proposed as the Senepis National Park have now been cleared and drained.

“The real story of APP’s tiger conservation impact in this area is not that they contributed only around 8000 ha of their own concessions to the sanctuary and are now clearing that anyway, but that overall they have been responsible for the loss of around 49,000 hectares of the Senepis tiger landscape,” said Hariansyah Usman of Walhi Riau, part of the Eyes on the Forest coalition that conducted the investigation.

“Meanwhile, they are running this massive greenwash advertising campaign through the world media and via various front groups to portray themselves as champions of tiger conservation.

“In trying to deny they are clearing their own designated tiger sanctuary, they have confirmed that they are clearing tiger forest and they are pulping tropical forests in defiance of public commitments to halt this by 2004, then by 2007, then by 2009 and now by 2015.”

The world of difference between APP’s claims and its practice is detailed in the new Eyes on the Forest report “The Truth behind APP’s Greenwash”. On climate, the report notes how emissions calculations conducted for APP and used in its greenwash campaigns disregard the immense emissions from draining deep peat areas such as Senepis for short lived plantation establishment – calculations suggest the carbon footprint of APP paper could be more than 500 times the APP consultant’s claim and 10 times the North America pulp and paper sector average.

The company’s greenwash campaigns and the lobbying of front groups have however failed to prevent a host of major companies ceasing to buy paper products from APP. In the Netherlands, APP’s print and television advertisements have been judged misleading to the public by the country’s Advertising Codes Commission.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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