Provincial

Destroy Mau Forest and forget L. Nakuru Park

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Kenya Wildlife Services director Julius Kipngetich (left) shows Prime Minister Raila Odinga (second right), Water minister Charity Ngilu and Lands minister James Orengo a map of the Mau Forest and Lake Nakuru National Park recently. Photos/ JOSEPH KIHERI 

By KENNEDY MASIBO
Posted  Tuesday, November 25  2008 at  19:58

In Summary

  • Water has been receding and may be non-existent in under a decade

Lake Nakuru may be extinct in another eight years if the current destruction in the Mau East is not contained, experts have warned.

The after effects of the destruction has led to the lake receding, and this will eventually lead to its death in under a decade.

Other lakes affected are Baringo, Bogoria, Natron and Turkana.

Kenya Wildlife Service director Julius Kipng’entich said the impact on the encroachment of human settlement started being felt after the excision of 67,000 acres.

This, he said affected the rivers which had been draining into the lake, with some drying up or becoming seasonal.

River Njoro’s water volume has gone down by more than 75 per cent, while the Mara River is only one-twelfth of its original volume.

He pointed out that without fresh water draining into the lake, the algae plant will no longer find its way into the lake, and the famous Flamingo birds associated with the lake will no longer survive; the birds feed on the plant.

The director said the impact would affect the Lake Nakuru National Park which is a leading tourist attraction.

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“If we lose the park, we will have shown the world that we are irresponsible and careless as a country,” he says.

The wildlife in the park depend on the Lake for survival, and they would have no other source of water if the lake dried up.

The director spoke weeks ago to a team led by Prime Minister Raila Odinga and three ministers who visited the park to assess the impact of the destruction.

The ministers were Charity Ngilu, Noah Wekesa and James Orengo. Others in the team were assistant ministers Ramadahani Kajembe and Simeon Lesirma.

The situation, however, according to KWS could be salvaged if stringent measures are enforced to save the catchment.

Already, a task force has been formed to address the destruction of the catchment area and will be expected to make recommendations to the Government.

Rift Valley provincial commissioner Hassan Noor Hassan who is the chairman of the enforcement committee says there has been drastic improvement since the task force was set up.

There are more than 162 officers drawn from the KWS, Kenya Forest Service, Administration Police and Narok county council.

Some of the activities that have been contained include illegal logging, charcoal burning and cultivation in the forest.

The officers’ task on the ground is to stop any further invasion and rehabilitate the damaged areas with the involvement of the communities.

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