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Why is our innovative human/lion conflict mitigation project in Merrueshi, Kenya so important? Read on.....
Friday 1st April 2022
Here are a few key paragraphs describing our innovative human/lion conflict mitigation project in Merrueshi, Kenya. LionAid are engaging in a challenge to climb Mount Kilimanjaro in July this year, with a 14-person team named “Lion Hearts”, to support lion conservation work and in particular to start a crucially important community project in Merrueshi, Kenya.
We estimate there to be less than 10,000 lions left in the wild. Acting NOW is paramount to saving this species. One of the main threats to lions is human/wildlife conflict. When livestock are killed, farmers retaliate by killing the predators, which can be disastrous to already fragile lion populations.
1. We need to to assist the Amboseli Maasai to make their livestock enclosures predator proof and to develop an Insurance herd to mitigate these retaliation killings. The project consists of upgrading bomas (enclosures where livestock are kept overnight to protect them from predators). Participating households donate livestock in return for the kit to upgrade their bomas. The donated livestock becomes “an insurance herd “kept within the community and from which the farmers can withdraw animals to compensate for any livestock losses from predation. This unique and sustainable programme to prevent predator depredation was formulated through LionAid meetings with Maasai Tribe Elders who conceived this concept. An initial investment in this innovative, locally applicable and community supported project will require no further financial input once the seed money has been distributed. This community-derived compensation scheme is hoped to be an effective substitute to counter the continuing frustration with existing compensation programmes which require regular injections of further funding.
3. The project will seek to improve the local primary school in various ways. For example, the United Nations General Assembly explicitly recognized the human right to water and sanitation and acknowledged that clean drinking water and sanitation are essential to the realisation of all human rights. The Merrueshi community, and especially the school, have no such access. While Kenya recognizes that statutory free primary education is crucial to national development, this does not translate well to areas of existing rural poverty. We intend to provide the school with a borehole to ensure access to drinking water and sanitation. The current lack of such basic provisions means that children, especially girls, don’t attend. 4. Part of the funds raised will go to improve a community primary school where the 400 girls and boys are facing a hard life academically. We aim to provide better toilet facilities, two additional classrooms and maybe even a school lunch programme if sufficient funds are raised to encourage children back into school.
Please support this project if you can. Thank you. You can DONATE here.
Tags: lions, Kenya, wildlife, schools, education, livestock, rural community Categories: Events/Fundraising, Education, Human/Wildlife Conflict, Population declines |
Add a comment | Posted by Chris Macsween at 15:08