Emmanuel de Mérode, head warden of the
Virunga National Park in
North Kivu, DRC was shot and wounded this week while driving alone from Goma to
park headquarters at Rumangabo.
de Mérode's jeep with bullet holes in windscreen |
This is one of the most dangerous areas in
DRC. Congolese armed forces with international support are gradually regaining
control of the area but armed rebel groups and militias are still present. Some
carry out illegal exploitation of natural resources.
The attack is not surprising. More than 130
park rangers have been killed in Virunga since 1996.
Loved by his staff and well-respected by
conservationists, the Belgian warden also made powerful enemies. Poachers are
shot and charcoal makers who are illegally active in the park are
systematically routed out.
MONUCSO boss Martin Kobler and Belgian ambassador
to DRC Michel Lastschenko travelled to Goma to be with de Mérode, proving the
high-profile nature of the attack.
The attack on de Mérode, qualified as a seemingly
‘targeted ambush’ by the Belgian ambassador in a confidential cable, may have
something to do with his longstanding battle against British oil company SOCO. SOCO has been given oil exploration rights in
the park. This contravenes DRC’s commitments to conservation and is in flagrant
violation with UNESCO which has listed the Virunga park as a National Heritage
Site. It also reveals the fragmented nature of Congolese power systems. The
Ministry of the Environment is a featherweight compared to the far more
powerful Ministry of Oil.
Head warden de Mérode deposited a legal
complaint against SOCO at the Goma public prosecutor’s office the morning of
the ambush. One of the items in the complaint relates to bullying of local
populations by SOCO sub-contractors. A similar complaint is about to be lodged in
London with the Serious Fraud Office (SFO).
SOCO is suspected of being behind the
attack – a suspicion that they reject. Belgian MP François-Xavier de Donnea
qualified the coincidence as ‘extremely worrisome’ as reported in La Libre
Belgique.
SOCO is an international oil and gas
exploration and production company, headquartered in London, traded on the
London Stock Exchange and a constituent of the FTSE 250 Index. The Company also
has interests in Vietnam, the Republic of Congo (Brazzaville) and Angola.
Billionaire son of Warren Buffet, Howard G.
Buffett is the Executive Producer of a film about park rangers in Virunga to be
previewed at the Tribeca Film Festival today. Buffet has been involved in infrastructure
development and peace-building initiatives in and around the park in recent years.
Nature conservation is dangerous business
in DRC. This is just one of many violent incidents. The presence of armed
groups is an ongoing conservation and human tragedy. The deadly Lord’s
Resistance Army has been active in Garamba (where de Mérode did his PhD fieldwork in the mid-1990s), as was the Sudanese People’s
Liberation Army. Virunga has been threatened by multiple armed forces such as
the M23 rebel group, the Hutu Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda
and other Mayi Mayi militia. At the Epulu Reserve, militia chief Morgan and his
men stormed the main station with AK47 assault rifles killing seven people and
all but one of the 16 okapis in June 2012.
These events testify to the legacy of armed
conflict in the Congo that continues to haunt people and wildlife. Even when
armed conflict ends, negative impacts persist.
Emmanuel, get well soon. The Virunga staff
needs you, the gorillas need you, conservation needs you. All the best and bon
courage.
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