New conservation efforts must recognise indigenous peoples as senior partners in the fight to protect their own land, not as ‘squatters’ and ‘poachers’ to be evicted and criminalised
By Sophie Grig
Scores of innocent people have been beaten up, raped and murdered in a series of atrocities which were committed by guards
Sadly, these revelations are only the tip of the iceberg. Around the world, in the name of “conservation”,
Some have their homes burnt down in front of them, others see their children, partners, friends and family murdered or maimed with impunity. The fact that abuses are perpetrated by eco-guards, park rangers, poaching patrols, the supposed “good guys”, suggests it might be time to seriously rethink how we do conservation.
For nearly 30 years,
The ecological crisis is urgent and desperate, which presumably explains why WWF, and those who continue to support them, behave as if the ends justify the means.
But evicting tribal peoples from their ancestral lands, removing
The model of conservation most common in Africa and Asia is known as
It is WWF’s fervent support for this model of conservation that has led to the atrocities exposed in the BuzzFeed report. Although it’s worth noting WWF’s
Fortress conservation justifies brutal evictions of tribal people on the basis that any kind of human presence is a threat to the environment, despite a wealth of evidence showing that, on the whole,
Paradoxically, once a national park or wildlife reserve is established, the same groups who kicked out the locals then welcome thousands of other (paying) people onto the land. Many protected areas encourage tourism, facilitate trophy hunting, or permit logging, mining or other resource extraction. Under fortress conservation, the ecosystem is not simply preserved in its natural state, it is managed according to economic imperatives.
Far from an untouched natural oasis, a wildlife reserve quickly becomes a wildlife theme park: four wheel drive vehicles careen across the land chasing selfies with rare species, and later the tourists return to their resort to bask in chlorinated swimming pools filled to the brim year-round, even in areas where water is scarce.
To meet the expectations of paying customers, charismatic species such as elephants or tigers are favoured and nurtured at the expense of others, and often wildlife reserves
It’s important to note that in some European countries, people living in areas which have now become national parks generally continue to live there quite happily.
Britain’s protected areas, for example, frequently encompass working farms, villages, and even whole towns, and the local communities and ways of life found there are considered part of the region’s charm as opposed to a blight on the landscape.
Imagine if members of a community in Scotland had been shot by rangers who had caught them entering land reserved for wild cats or golden eagles. Though poaching of these species does occur, the fact that WWF seems prepared to tolerate violence against African rhino poachers but presumably not against Scottish eagle poachers reflects its attitude to the people involved, not the animals.
There is no justification for how big conservation treats indigenous peoples: conniving with governments to kick the locals off their own land because they, the outsiders, supposedly know what’s best for it, yet coincidentally go on to turn huge profits from the resources they have commandeered “for the greater good”.
Big conservation attempts to justify its land grab by claiming that the local people don’t know how to care for their own land and don’t respect wildlife. Yet, for generations, these communities have made their living as hunter-gatherers or subsistence farmers: their day-to-day survival has always depended on their profound understanding of their environment and
In adventure stories, films and books, on scientific expeditions, army exercises, commercial safari trips and much more, hiring local guides or trackers is seen as essential because no one else knows the terrain as well as they do, no outsider can read and interpret it as they can.
We risk the future of the planet if we allow big conservation not only to ignore
This precious knowledge, the most intimate understanding we have of these ecosystems, accumulated over thousands of years, erodes alarmingly quickly: it can be lost entirely within a generation.
When eco-guards abuse and alienate local communities, they also help to deliver key intelligence into the hands of the enemy.
Disaffected tribespeople, deprived of their land and harassed by wildlife guards, are easy prey for poachers who offer the tribes not only money but also retribution against their persecutors in exchange for tactical knowledge of the forest.
By sidelining and brutalising tribal peoples, WWF and others like it are making the original and best conservationists into the enemies of conservation.
The world’s most famous natural environments, from the Amazon to the Serengeti,
And now, when
Anyone who truly cares about the planet must stop supporting any form of “conservation” which wounds, alienates and destroys the environment’s best allies. It’s time for a new conservation that recognises indigenous peoples as senior partners in the fight to protect their own land, not as “squatters” and “poachers” to be evicted and criminalised.
WWF must be held accountable, conservation must change, and we must demand a new approach that puts indigenous peoples at its heart. It’s best for tribes, for nature, and for all humanity.
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Related to SDG 13: Climate action and SDG 10: Reduced inequalities