New Era (Windhoek)

Namibia: Wildlife Scheme Takes Another Step

Wezi Tjaronda

2 October 2008


Windhoek — More than 20 farms from seven regions have been selected to be the first beneficiaries of the Wildlife Breeding Stock Loan Scheme.

The farms were elected out of 190 applications that the Ministry of Environment and Tourism received from Omaheke, Hardap, Otjozondjupa, Karas, Kunene, Erongo and Kavango regions. None of the farms are from the Kavango Region.

A statement from the ministry said yesterday the recipients of the game would soon be contacted for final inspections of their farms, contract signing and date of delivery of the wildlife before the actual translocations can be done.

Fanuel Demas, acting director of Scientific Services, told New Era yesterday some of the game will be translocated this year although the bulk will be done in 2008 because the current rise in daytime temperatures is unfavourable for catching game.

"The ministry will retain the list of applicants and future translocations to qualifying farms will take place as game becomes available and as logistics allow," he said in the statement.

Demas said the availability of game in protected areas, the drought spell in the country, farm size versus current game present on the farms, fencing and water provision, regional representation and prior commitments of the game capture team of the ministry were some of the factors considered when selecting the farms.

Five species of game, namely zebra, springbuck, oryx, ostrich and eland will be translocated to the farms.

The ministry advertised for people to participate in the scheme in October last year, saying it recognised there were emerging commercial, resettled and communal farmers within the freehold land tenure system who were interested in developing a wildlife based land use but did not have the capital to restock.

Through the scheme, the ministry will provide recipients with viable founder populations with an agreement that within a number of years the equivalent number of animals would be removed, leaving the recipient with access to the balance of the population.

The objectives of the scheme are to promote diversification of economic activities on farmland, support the ministry's rare species management programme and to promote the maintenance and restoration of biodiversity for sustainable utilisation.

Beneficiaries placed on the highest priority category of the scheme are those who are historically disadvantaged, who have land suitable for the programme acquired through the Agribank's Affirmative Action Loan Scheme and those that have been resettled on land suitable for the programme by the Ministry of Lands and Resettlement, among others.

Demas said the ministry wants to partner with game farmers and game dealers for them to contribute to the programme by donating additional wildlife that can be translocated through the scheme.

"Such contributions will enable the ministry to accelerate the implementation of the scheme," he said.

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