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Failure to save wetlands puts lives at risk, say experts

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Environmental experts have criticised the government for not doing enough to save wetland areas as they face threat. Photo/TOM OTIENO

Environmental experts have criticised the government for not doing enough to save wetland areas as they face threat. Photo/TOM OTIENO  

By ABIUD OCHIENG
Posted  Monday, February 1  2010 at  21:00

In Summary

  • Expert faults the government, saying it has not provided conservation funds

Countries all over the globe mark World Wetlands Day on Tuesday, but experts are yet to find solutions to the wanton destruction of wetlands.

They have lamented over the lack of a clear policy guideline to help in the conservation drive.

Currently, the natural resource is managed by the Ministry of Wildlife.

It is feared failure to conserve wetlands will put at risk livelihoods, increasing animal-human conflicts, besides endangering certain fish species.
Kisumu-based conservationist Okoth Mireri said: “It is so sad that we do not have a wetlands policy, even as the resources continue to dwindle.”

“If the Kenya Wildlife ministry is supposed to manage the wetlands then it means they will only concentrate on those areas where there are animals,” he added.

He said a clear policy on the boundary between wetlands and land use should be put in place to avert the current trend that has seen many encroachments.

Moi University lecturer and chairman of the Lake Victoria Institute for Research and Development, Dr Philip Raburu, voiced the same sentiments.

He argued that the problem is compounded by the fact that some wetlands are located on individuals’ pieces of land and therefore very difficult to enforce conservation measures.

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Dr Raburu further said the Kenyan Government has never come up with a clear-cut policy on funding the conservation.

“There has never been funding from the central government, it has been left to non-governmental organizations to push the agenda in a vacuum, as they have no legal backing within which they can authoritatively move it,” said Dr Raburu.

He said even within government structures, not many officials know the importance of wetlands and therefore communities can not get advice and reference on what to do.

Mr Mireri on Monday said the infestation of the water bodies by hyacinth and the increased inflow of silt was a result of the reduced cover on the banks of rivers and lakes.

He said the increased human-hippo conflicts in recent times have been caused by the cultivation of crops on river banks and lake shores, which previously served as grazing ground for the animals.

“Species such as lungfish and mudfish are also facing extinction at the rate at which the wetlands are disappearing,” he added.

But on Monday the government announced that more than 40 per cent of wetland areas in western Kenya have been demarcated in readiness for gazettement .

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