Africa expands efforts to fight nature crime across borders
Temwani Mgunda, Dialogue Earth
August 6, 2024
See link
https://dialogue.earth/en/nature/africa-expands-efforts-to-fight-nature-crime-across-borders/
for photos.
Tackling nature crime in Africa – and globally – is a major challenge. A
big factor is that many of these are cross-border crimes, which need the
kind of international cooperation and information sharing that is scarce.
The Nature Crime Alliance, launched in August 2023, is trying to help fill
this gap. In February, Ghana and Malawi became the latest African
governments to join this global alliance of governments, civil society
groups, law enforcement agencies and private organisations. The network is
managed through the World Resources Institute in association with the UN
Office on Drugs and Crime.
In Malawi and the wider Southern Africa region, nature crime is a pressing
issue. Malawi’s director of forestry, Titus Zulu, tells Dialogue Earth:
“Our forests, including the valuable miombo woodlands, are under threat due
to illegal logging, driven by both domestic and international demand,” he
says. “Wildlife crimes, including the poaching of elephants for ivory and
pangolins for scales, also pose a serious challenge because they involve
international syndicates.”
As for West Africa, Ghana’s Forestry Commission chief executive, John
Allotey, tells Dialogue Earth that the region’s rich biodiversity and
forests draw global attention, including from illegal miners, fishers and
their customers. He gives the example of illegal gold mining leading to
deforestation, river pollution and increased poaching.
“As for Ghana, the high forest zone – which covers about 34% of the country
– is the hub for nature crimes,” Allotey says. “There is quite some
pressure on natural resources where natives and migrants engage in these
crimes as a means of earning their livelihood.”
More Than an Environmental Problem
The alliance defines nature crimes as illegal forms of logging, mining,
fishing, wildlife trade and land conversion. Africa feels the impacts of
such activities particularly severely, explains Robert Wabunoha,
environment governance coordinator for Africa at the UN Environment
Programme (UNEP). To combat the problem, robust continental, national and
local efforts are needed, he adds.
The illegal trade in Africa’s wild elephants, rhinos and pangolins has hit
these populations, diminishing biodiversity and disrupting ecosystems,
Wabunoha says. “This not only threatens biodiversity, but also impacts
tourism, which is a crucial economic sector for many African countries,” he
states.
The Nature Crime Alliance’s director, Yulia Stange, says much of this
criminal activity directly impacts those parts of the world most critical
to the planet’s ecological health and to human well-being. As an example,
illegal logging in the Congo Basin – the world’s second largest rainforest
– causes habitat loss and the release of planet-warming gases.
Stange says it will not be possible to meet global climate and biodiversity
goals without addressing the scourge of nature crime.
She says nature crime overlaps not only with financial crime and
corruption, but also with the trafficking of human beings, drugs and small
arms. “Nature crime should therefore be seen not only as an environmental
challenge, but as an economic and security challenge, too.”
“In parts of Africa, for example, nature crime has been linked to terrorism
finance,” Stange says.
Efforts and Challenges
Africa loses about USD 17 billion annually to illegal logging, with most of
the smuggled wood going to Asia. As an example of wildlife crime, about
157,000 elephants were poached in Africa between 2010 and 2018, according
to a report by the UN Office of Drugs and Crime.
Africa does have other initiatives and measures, as well as the Nature
Crime Alliance, to fight nature crimes.
In Ghana, Allotey says a new Wildlife Resources Management Act was passed
last year, revising all laws relating to wildlife and protected areas.
There is Ghana’s REDD+ Strategy 2016-2035 to preserve forests and make
agriculture more “climate-smart”. And there is the Ghana Shea Landscape
Emission Reductions Project, which also involves stemming forest loss and
restoring trees.
In Malawi, Zulu says various policies have been implemented, including the
National Forest Policy and the National Parks and Wildlife Act. The country
collaborates with regional bodies, like the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) and the African Union, on initiatives such as SADC’s Law
Enforcement and Anti-Poaching Strategy.
“But challenges remain,” Zulu says. “Greater regional cooperation and
stronger legal frameworks are needed to enhance the effectiveness of these
efforts.”
UNEP has been trying to combat nature crime in Africa through various
interventions, such as by training police in Uganda, and supporting the
development of laws and policies.
According to Wabunoha, UNEP also implements specific projects to combat
nature crime in Africa via the Global Environment Facility (GEF), which
channels money to projects that support five environmental conventions
including the UN’s biodiversity and climate conventions. He gives the
example of the GEF-6 project to combat illegal wildlife trade in South
Sudan.
There is also the Lusaka Agreement Task Force (LATF), which focuses on
combating transboundary illegal wildlife trade in Africa, and the Bamako
Convention which addresses hazardous waste and chemical management.
Towards Fostering Collaboration
Zulu is very positive about the Nature Crime Alliance. “For Malawi, it
means better access to resources and expertise that can help strengthen our
enforcement capabilities and develop more effective strategies to combat
nature crime,” he says. “Regionally, the alliance represents a unified
commitment to addressing a common threat, fostering collaboration that can
lead to more coordinated and impactful actions against nature crime.”
Stange says the alliance is committed to building its network in Africa to
support efforts to counter nature crime. For instance, in January it
convened the first Southern Africa Regional Private Sector Dialogue on
Disruption of Financial Crimes related to Environmental Crimes.
Stange says the alliance is also supporting members, such as the
Environmental Investigation Agency and the Wildlife Conservation Society,
to undertake work in Africa under the Countering Nature Crime initiative,
which is funded by the US Agency for International Development.
“This includes work to develop Gabon’s timber traceability system,” she
says, “and a project focused on wildlife trafficking in Nigeria and the
Republic of Congo.”
https://dialogue.earth/en/nature/africa-expands-efforts-to-fight-nature-crime-across-borders/