Conservation hell
Indicative of
deeper malaise of poor management of protected areas, critics warn
A view of In what was apparently a face-saving move,
But even if
The IUCN, which had conducted a
thorough evaluation of the park, urged UNESCO in a report this month “not to
inscribe the nomination of
But dismayed conservationists say
this is not just a question of Cat Tien, which has already been recognized as
a UNESCO biosphere reserve, losing another title.
More important is that the failure
should serve as a wake-up call for
“For the past few years, Vietnam has
been all about 'winning' recognition,” Pamela McElwee, an assistant professor
of human ecology at Rutgers University in the US who has researched
extensively on Vietnam's protected areas, said.
“But then after having received this
international attention, authorities don't follow up to ensure the cultural
or environmental values they won recognition for… are conserved,” she told Vietweek.
Conservationists cite the example of
the world-renowned Ha Long Bay, where winning international attention has not
halted serious environmental problems like coal mining and unregulated
dumping of waste into the bay.
In 2011 Ha Long Bay, twice recognized
as a UNESCO World Heritage site, made it to the list of New Natural Wonders
of the World in a campaign marred by allegations that organizers asked
candidates to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in fees.
Critics also said the voting methods
were shrouded in secrecy.
After Ha Long scooped the new honor
experts had expressed concern about its preservation. But the site has
continued to suffer from increasing pollution due to industrial and urban
development, coal mining, and tourism.
Another example is the rampant
deforestation of the World Heritage site
Just this month a Quang Binh court
handed down jail terms to 12 people in a high-profile case of illegal logging
of rare trees in the park.
The park director was censured and a
deputy director was dismissed for failing to handle the case properly and
quickly after it was detected despite an outcry.
A study released last May by UK-based
conservation group Flora and Fauna International said law enforcement is
absent at the park, with illegal logging and transportation of timber being
rampant and done openly.
Conservationists say such cases are emblematic
of the poor management of
Not achieving World Heritage
recognition for
But on the bright side, McElwee said:
“This will encourage authorities to look at how they might better address the
multiple threats to
Cosseted
conservation
Located 100 kilometers northeast of
Eleven ethnic minority groups live
around the park.
After the discovery of a population
of Javan rhinos in 1992, the park was declared a rhinoceros reserve and
received worldwide attention.
Of 30 national parks and scores of
other protected areas spanning forests and wetlands across
But the killing of
From 1998 to 2004 the WWF alone
invested US$6.3 million in the park, with up to $600,000 earmarked for rhino
conservation work.
From the mid-1990s, a number of
organizations were involved in efforts to conserve the remaining Javan rhino
population in Cat Tien, but conservationists have blamed land conversion and
a growing local population for threatening the animal’s habitat, which has
been cut in half since 1988 to about 30,000 hectares today.
But in practice, such provisions are
minor considerations in land use and infrastructure-planning decisions, it
added.
Conservationists say the death of the
last rhino in Cat Tien should be a bitter lesson that funding alone by no
means assures the survival of wildlife.
The failure to win the UNESCO
recognition “reflects a serious concern in the international community that
The IUCN said in its report to UNESCO
that since the discontinuation of a major conservation project - funded by
the WWF - in 2004 and the decline in other project activities, management
support in Cat Tien “has been reduced dramatically and overall management
capacity may also have declined.”
The report quoted the park staff as
saying that “local tourists pose the biggest risk to the biodiversity.”
It also identified rampant poaching
as a current threat to the park.
Speaking to Vietweek two years ago, Tran Van Thanh,
then Cat Tien director, lamented that his 130 rangers faced an uphill task in
patrolling the 74,000-hectare (182,000-acre) park.
Each of them, who were paid around
VND3 million a month, had to be on duty for 22 days in a row and stay in the
forest on their own.
Since then no major headway has been
made in terms of personnel or their wages.
Experts point out that even if
rangers manage a protected area well they get little pay or recognition, so
it comes as no surprise that people become corrupt easily and the entire
system suffers.
“A requirement for being nominated
for international recognition ought to be excellence in management -
unfortunately it is not, as we see in the case of Cat Tien,” McElwee
said.
Fading faith
The IUCN also expressed concern about
plans to build two hydropower stations on the
The dams have faced fierce opposition
from conservationists who warn if built they would totally alter the marine
environment in the park and inundate forests.
The planned construction of these two
dams “had a major bearing on the recommendation of the IUCN against
recognizing Cat Tien,” Long, the Vietnamese expert, said.
The opponents of the dams also say
the impacts are beyond estimation since it is not only about the park but
also the lives of millions of people living in downstream areas in
Conservationists say in energy-hungry
But the fact is they are driven
purely by the desire to make profit at any cost, they say.
The pace and scale of hydropower and
road development are proceeding with scant regard for Vietnam’s remaining
biodiversity and protected areas, experts say.
Even the World Bank and the Asian
Development Bank are contributing to this rapid degradation with support to
hydropower and road projects which are having serious negative impacts on
protected areas, they add.
“Protected area managers in
An increasing number of lawmakers,
government agencies, environmental groups, and local administrations have
joined the opposing camp, saying the two Cat Tien dams must be scrapped.
But they are not too sure if their
concerns will be heeded.
“The dam developer has been lobbying
so aggressively,” Trinh Le Nguyen, executive director of People and Nature
Reconciliation, one of
The National Assembly,
Nguyen Van Dien, the current Cat Tien
director, declined to say whether he is against or for the building of the
dams.
“All I can say is that everything has
to be carried out in accordance with the law,” he told Vietweek.
But he and other Vietnamese experts
concur that conservation efforts in the country are all too often undermined
by people with vested interests.
They say that when developers want
the land, power and money do the talking and environmental conservation has
no chance of winning.
With Vietnamese authorities saying
they will submit the application for Cat Tien’s recognition this September,
conservationists say the country risks rejection again if it fails to stop
the building of the two dams.
The fallout from the construction
will also be irreversible, they warn.
“If
“In so doing, Cat Tien will lose the
[UNESCO] recognition forever.
“But the most important thing is no
one will ever believe that
By An Dien, Thanh Nien News
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Chủ Nhật, 23 tháng 6, 2013
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