The Japan Times - Kenya conservation areas evolve to keep Maasai and wildlife together

EUR -
AED 4.330938
AFN 77.832669
ALL 96.602299
AMD 448.308258
ANG 2.111018
AOA 1081.405926
ARS 1712.281766
AUD 1.683491
AWG 2.122717
AZN 2.011969
BAM 1.952352
BBD 2.385487
BDT 144.854178
BGN 1.98046
BHD 0.444593
BIF 3523.311312
BMD 1.179287
BND 1.505609
BOB 8.213494
BRL 6.173331
BSD 1.184408
BTN 108.30872
BWP 15.600156
BYN 3.391411
BYR 23114.031108
BZD 2.381993
CAD 1.612735
CDF 2541.363858
CHF 0.917604
CLF 0.025732
CLP 1016.049951
CNY 8.19192
CNH 8.177927
COP 4279.633617
CRC 588.120153
CUC 1.179287
CUP 31.251113
CVE 110.070608
CZK 24.316784
DJF 210.907524
DKK 7.469871
DOP 74.866187
DZD 153.292081
EGP 55.426182
ERN 17.68931
ETB 184.766832
FJD 2.595906
FKP 0.863817
GBP 0.863125
GEL 3.178225
GGP 0.863817
GHS 12.987064
GIP 0.863817
GMD 86.679113
GNF 10400.833668
GTQ 9.08795
GYD 247.792382
HKD 9.214933
HNL 31.289151
HRK 7.535878
HTG 155.34618
HUF 380.604318
IDR 19774.289471
ILS 3.641857
IMP 0.863817
INR 106.493127
IQD 1551.553277
IRR 49677.477759
ISK 145.005151
JEP 0.863817
JMD 186.104935
JOD 0.836112
JPY 183.85502
KES 152.423113
KGS 103.128449
KHR 4772.274622
KMF 492.941585
KPW 1061.343532
KRW 1709.471372
KWD 0.362501
KYD 0.986953
KZT 598.108773
LAK 25471.016518
LBP 105583.598595
LKR 366.770704
LRD 219.701992
LSL 18.962411
LTL 3.482129
LVL 0.713339
LYD 7.482785
MAD 10.800625
MDL 20.051588
MGA 5285.631848
MKD 61.645314
MMK 2476.644764
MNT 4208.203103
MOP 9.528032
MRU 47.067395
MUR 54.117259
MVR 18.220542
MWK 2055.212701
MXN 20.433806
MYR 4.637552
MZN 75.179503
NAD 18.962572
NGN 1643.820395
NIO 43.616812
NOK 11.426404
NPR 173.429011
NZD 1.954946
OMR 0.453443
PAB 1.184408
PEN 3.989155
PGK 5.079035
PHP 69.680557
PKR 331.782131
PLN 4.222208
PYG 7875.092072
QAR 4.329654
RON 5.095662
RSD 117.416885
RUB 90.476221
RWF 1732.876805
SAR 4.422659
SBD 9.502817
SCR 16.389742
SDG 709.342365
SEK 10.551968
SGD 1.498998
SHP 0.884771
SLE 28.863016
SLL 24729.064203
SOS 677.426358
SRD 44.842382
STD 24408.866168
STN 24.476076
SVC 10.363653
SYP 13042.416233
SZL 18.967656
THB 37.188904
TJS 11.062064
TMT 4.139298
TND 3.417065
TOP 2.839441
TRY 51.295343
TTD 8.018906
TWD 37.243063
TZS 3050.273424
UAH 51.045558
UGX 4230.52861
USD 1.179287
UYU 45.948851
UZS 14479.428382
VES 438.270999
VND 30663.828412
VUV 140.969154
WST 3.21511
XAF 655.310907
XAG 0.013545
XAU 0.000239
XCD 3.187083
XCG 2.134521
XDR 0.814972
XOF 654.800579
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.112568
ZAR 18.879387
ZMK 10615.001017
ZMW 23.242951
ZWL 379.73003
  • CMSC

    -0.0020

    23.748

    -0.01%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • GSK

    0.6490

    53.119

    +1.22%

  • BCC

    3.8900

    85.64

    +4.54%

  • NGG

    1.0200

    85.63

    +1.19%

  • RIO

    3.7000

    96.22

    +3.85%

  • AZN

    1.5150

    189.925

    +0.8%

  • RYCEF

    0.3000

    17

    +1.76%

  • BTI

    0.6550

    61.645

    +1.06%

  • CMSD

    -0.0220

    24.058

    -0.09%

  • BCE

    0.2500

    26.08

    +0.96%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.13

    -0.15%

  • BP

    0.5300

    38.23

    +1.39%

  • RELX

    -5.6800

    29.85

    -19.03%

  • VOD

    0.2410

    15.151

    +1.59%

Kenya conservation areas evolve to keep Maasai and wildlife together
Kenya conservation areas evolve to keep Maasai and wildlife together / Photo: Tony KARUMBA - AFP

Kenya conservation areas evolve to keep Maasai and wildlife together

At dawn in a village in Kenya's Maasai Mara wilderness, zebras rouse themselves and head away from the huts where they like to sleep as protection from lions.

Text size:

Bernard Kirokor, 21, recounts watching an elephant give birth across from his village a few days earlier, showing a video of the mother protecting the newborn, its trunk poking up like a periscope to sniff for danger.

"The wildlife are our neighbours and we love them," he said, as the villagers milked the herd of cattle gathered around their huts.

The village lies in the Nashulai conservancy, which prides itself on how the local Maasai community and their cattle continuing to live alongside the lions, elephants and giraffes for which the region is world-famous.

Community conservancies emerged in the 2000s to protect wildlife corridors, with locals pooling their individual plots and pulling down fences so animals could roam freely.

To make it pay, locals often leased their land to tourist companies and moved away.

Nashulai, which means "co-existence" in the local Maa language, was founded in 2016 with a determination to keep its 6,000 people in the conservancy.

It prides itself on being the first that was formed, owned and managed by local Maasai without help from an outside tourism company.

"We don't want to create conservation refugees. The Maasai have lived with the wildlife for the longest time possible. Why do we have to move them because of conservation?" Evelyn Aiko, Nashulai's conservation manager, told AFP.

Nashulai earns money through a college in the conservancy, training locals to become rangers and tour guides, and study programmes with universities.

Its model has earned international recognition, including the United Nations Development Programme's Equator Prize in 2020 and a Collective Action Award from the Rights and Resources Initiative this year.

- Connectedness -

The system of conservancies has changed radically over the past decade, with almost all now embracing the idea that people should stay living in them, albeit with limits on development.

"A lot has changed in how they are governed," said Eric Ole Reson, chief programmes officer at the Maasai Mara Wildlife Conservancies Association.

"As we extended into more areas, with more settlements, we could not keep moving people," he said.

This was important in Nashulai from the start.

"There was a present and clear danger of losing the cultural connectedness to the land... which contains all our stories for living, this land where the bones of our ancestors are buried," said founder Nelson Ole Reiyia.

Nashulai is run by a council of elders who decide on grazing and conservation areas.

"It revives their old tradition of stewardship and their connectedness to the land and the wildlife," said Ole Reiyia. "It has really given them a lot of pride."

Lacking commercial tourism investors, Nashulai relies on donors for more than half its funding and faces many pressures.

One is climate change, as unpredictable rains make it hard to plan cattle-grazing and keep the area habitable for wildlife. The team is responding with regenerative programmes like tree-planting.

The other threat is wealthy tourism operators next door. Last year, a fifth of Nashulai's landowners were enticed into leasing their plots to tourist camps and moving away.

- 'Not one-way' -

But Maasai landowners across the region now play a very active role in managing conservancies across the region, sitting on joint boards with the tourism companies.

"It's not a one-way system where someone dictates the payments," said an expert who has helped negotiate the deals, but requested anonymity due to the sensitivity of the subject.

"These negotiations go on for years and then they get renegotiated," he said. "If people aren't happy they'll tell you about it."

Many Maasai landowners have signed new leases in the last couple of years as the original deals expired, he said, so "clearly many people feel they have benefitted".

T.Ueda--JT