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Emergency appeal for Okapi Wildlife Reserve (DRC) following murderous raid by poachers

Burned-out park headquarters after the attack. © ICCN | ICCN
Wednesday, 4 July 2012
access_time 2 min read

UNESCO and the nongovernmental organization Fauna and Flora International are launching an emergency appeal to support the staff and rebuild the headquarters of the Okapi Wildlife Reserve in Epulu, a small village in the northeast of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.  On 24 June, poachers armed with AK47 rifles attacked the facility and killed seven people, including two rangers.  The appeal hopes to raise $120,000 by 31st July to help the families of the victims and repair the Reserve’s headquarters.

Led by the notorious elephant poacher known as Morgan, the attackers torched buildings and destroyed equipment. Unless the facility can be restored very soon, these poachers will have met their objective; to move freely about the reserve in their search for elephant tusks.

“Unless we can reverse this situation quickly, this will be a real setback for the conservation in Okapi Wildlife Reserve, home to the largest remaining population of forest elephants in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.  We can’t let those poachers kill rangers and hunt wildlife with impunity,” urged Guy Debonnet, of UNESCO’s World Heritage Centre.

The Reserve is a World Heritage site.  Funds from the campaign will be used to protect its elephants, whose population has been declining rapidly because of the ivory poaching.  They will also help to re-establish the Reserve’s successful okapi breeding programme, which has played a critical role in preserving the gene pool of this rare forest giraffe.  15 okapi were killed in the raid.  Buildings will be rebuilt and equipment repaired or replaced.  Perhaps most importantly, the families of those who were killed will be supported.

In a meeting with UNESCO during the recent session of the World Heritage Committee in Saint Petersburg, the Director General of the Congolese Institute of Nature Conservation (ICCN), Cosma Wilungula, expressed grave concern over the situation in Okapi and called on UNESCO to help resume the conservation activities that were halted by the attack.

The appeal for funds is conducted as part of the Rapid Response Facility created by UNESCO and Fauna and Flora International to raise financial assistance for conservation emergencies.

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