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rural rural development development forestry network forestry network network paper 25e the law communities and wildlife july 2001 management in cameroon samuel e egbe a community wildlife management model from ...

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         Rural              Rural Development
     Development
       Forestry
       Network              Forestry Network
  network paper 25e         The Law, Communities and Wildlife
  July 2001                 Management in Cameroon
                            Samuel E. Egbe
                            A Community Wildlife Management Model
                            from Mount Cameroon
                            Kristin B. Olsen, Henry Ekwoge, Rose M. Ongie, James
                            Acworth, Ebwekoh M. O’Kah and Charles Tako
                            Gorilla-based Tourism: a Realistic Source of
     DFID                   Community Income in Cameroon? Case
                            study of the villages of Goungoulou and
                            Karagoua
                            Elias Djoh and Mark van der Wal
                            Community Hunting Zones: First Steps in
                            the Decentralisation of Wildlife
                            Management. Observations from the
                            Village of Djaposten, Cameroon
                            Mark van der Wal and Elias Djoh
                                             CONTENTS                                                                                  PAGE
                                             25e(i)   The Law, Communities and Wildlife Management in Cameroon                              1
                                                      Samuel E. Egbe
                                             25e(ii)  A Community Wildlife Management Model from Mount Cameroon                            13
                                                      Kristin B. Olsen, Henry Ekwoge, Rose M. Ongie, James Acworth,
                                                      Ebwekoh M. O’kah and Charles Tako
                                             25e(iii) Gorilla-based Tourism: a Realistic Source of Community Income in                     31
                                                      Cameroon? Case Study of the Villages of Koungoulou and Karagoua
                                                      Elias Djoh and Mark van der Wal
                                             25e(iv) Community Hunting Zones: First Steps in the Decentralisation of                       38
                                                      Wildlife Management. Observations from the Village of Djaposten, Cameroon
                                                      Mark van der Wal and Elias Djoh
                                           ABOUT THE AUTHORS
                                           Samuel E. Egbe is a Researcher and Lecturer in the Faculty of Law and Political Science, University
                                           of Yaoundé II – Soa, and a researcher and consultant in environmental law. He can be contacted at:
                                           egbee@yahoo.com
                                           Kristin Olsen, DFID APO for Community Resource Management, is seeking to integrate participatory
                                           monitoring and evaluation into the framework of community-based management initiatives. Henry
                                           Ekwoge, Area Manager for the Onge Mokoko area, is working to develop a Participatory Management
                                           Plan for a State Forest Reserve and adjacent forests.  Rose Ongie, Area Manager for West Coast
                                           area, is working to develop and implement participatory approaches to sustainable wildlife
                                           management. James Acworth, DFID Forest Management and Conservation Adviser, provides advice
                                           on the process of developing sustainable, community-based resource management models, broader
                                           forest management systems, land use strategies to ensure long-term maintenance of biodiversity, and
                                           support to local livelihoods. Ebwekoh M. O’kah, GEF MCP wildlife unit, is responsible for collection
                                           of baseline information (on all forms of wildlife) on which to base management decisions, as well as
                                           providing advice on methods of participatory wildlife management and training to build local capacity.
                                           Charles Tako is the former area manager for the West Coast. The authors work for the Mount
                                           Cameroon Project (Limbe). This is a Ministry of Environment and Forests project funded by the UK
                                           Department for International Development and implemented under contract by LTS International,
                                           Scotland. The authors can be contacted at mcplbg@iccnet.cm and OLSEN927@aol.com.
                                           Elias Djoh is Director of the Lomié-based non-governmental organisation, CIAD (Centre International
                                           d’Appui au Développement), and can be contacted at: CIAD, P.O. Box 24 Lomié, Cameroon. Email:
                                           vso@camnet.cm. Mark van der Wal is a Consultant for the SNV-SDDL project. He can be contacted
                                           at: SNV Cameroon, P.O. Box 1239, Yaoundé, Cameroon. Email: snvcmpose@gcnet.cm
                                           ISSN 0 85003 536 8
                                                                                                                                                                                                                      RDFN paper 25e(i) – July 2001
                                                                                                                                       THE LAW, COMMUNITIES AND WILDLIFE
                                                                                                                                       MANAGEMENT IN CAMEROON
                                                                                                                                       Samuel E. Egbe
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       , communities and wildlife management in Cameroon
                                                                                                                                       SUMMARY                                              of forest resources. It constitutes an important
                                                                                                                                                                                            aspect of the democratisation and liberalisation           The law
                                                                                                                                       A range of countries have sought more equitable      process initiated by the State in the early 1990s.
                                                                                                                                       governance of their natural resources, by            The 1994 Law and its 1995 Decree of
                                                                                                                                       devolving decision-making and resource               Application on wildlife (Wildlife Decree)
                                                                                                                                       control to local populations. In 1994, Camer-        recognise traditional custodians of wildlife
                                                                                                                                       oon adopted a new law granting local                 resources as partners in the resource manage-
                                                                                                                                       communities the possibility of greater control       ment exercise. They were enacted on the
                                                                                                                                       over forests and wildlife, principally in            assumption that resources are better managed
                                                                                                                                       response to donor conditionality on Structural       when their local custodians have shared or
                                                                                                                                       Adjustment Loans (SALs).                             exclusive rights to make decisions over and
                                                                                                                                                                                            benefit from their use.
                                                                                                                                       However, the enactment of this law lacked
                                                                                                                                       significant domestic support. Conflicting            In bringing decision-making as close as
                                                                                                                                       interests and Cameroon’s highly centralised          possible to citizens, joint resource management
                                                                                                                                       administrative machinery have prevented              is seen as integral to ‘good governance’
                                                                                                                                       effective devolution of wildlife management.         (Brown, 1999). To succeed, it requires
                                                                                                                                       This paper examines the opportunities and            processes to negotiate and share rights and
                                                                                                                                       constraints presented by Cameroon’s reform           privileges (including tenure and decision-
                                                                                                                                       process, in an attempt to encourage the              making powers) by multiple stakeholders, and
                                                                                                                                       development of a more forward-looking and            the recognition of these by government and a
                                                                                                                                       better-integrated wildlife management policy.        wide range of resource users (Ingles et al.,
                                                                                                                                                                                            1999). Enabling laws and policies are likely to
                                                                                                                                       INTRODUCTION                                         devolve management responsibilities, promote
                                                                                                                                                                                            institutional reforms, increase resource flows
                                                                                                                                       Cameroon’s 1994 Forestry and Wildlife law            to forest-dependent populations, and create
                                                                                                                                       was enacted with the objective of involving          new partnerships involving changes in
                                                                                                                                       communities in the management and protection         ownership and access (Brown, 1999).
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    1
                                                                                                                                                                                                              RDFN paper 25e(i) – July 2001
                 Many countries have sought to ‘give back’          the following section discusses the circum-                   and equitable benefit-sharing mechanisms          younger generation of wildlife staff. However,
                 rights of ownership and control to traditional     stances under which the 1994 Forestry and                     involving councils and communities.               although many of the provisions of the 1995
                 users, though to differing degrees. In Tanzania,   Wildlife Law, and its 1995 Decree of                                                                            Decree were new, they failed to provide a
                 despite the lack of framework legislation, joint   Application on wildlife (Wildlife Decree), were               However, transparent and equitable manage-        holistic legislative framework for local
                 wildlife management regimes with local             drafted.                                                      ment of timber resources was over-emphasised      involvement in wildlife management. This
                 communities in the Duru-Haitemba and Mgori                                                                       to the detriment of reforms in wildlife           partly reflects the fact that this younger
                 Forests (Arusha and Singida Regions) have          THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE                                  management, and a unique opportunity was          generation of staff responsible for drafting the
                 reduced government’s role to one of technical      WILDLIFE REGULATIONS                                          missed to formulate legislation that treated      decree received little support and encourage-
                 adviser and watchdog. Certain communities                                                                        forests and wildlife holistically. Apart from so- ment from external actors, particularly donors
                 have been awarded title deeds (Wily, 1997).        The reform process initiated by Cameroon’s                    called local ‘traditional hunting’ rights and the (Ekoko. 1999).
                 These experiences illustrate how local             government in 1994 has been complex and                       manner of exploiting wildlife in council and
                 populations with unfettered rights of ownership    difficult, involving differing stakeholders at                community forests, the wildlife provisions of     The consequences of this lack of support are
                 and control over wildlife resources are likely     various stages of the devolution exercise. In                 the 1994 Law make little mention of the interests already discernible. Certain provisions of the           , communities and wildlife management in Cameroon
                 to be better managers than under-resourced and     the wake of the CFA’s devaluation in 1994, the                of local councils and communities. These          1995 Wildlife Decree (such as those addressing
                 conflict-ridden public services.                   government was in dire need of foreign currency               provisions merely reproduced some of the          community hunting zones and community                    The law
                                                                    through increased logging and timber exports.                 backward-looking stipulations of previous         royalties from leased hunting zones) have lain
                 Zimbabwe’s experience demonstrates how             The re-introduction of multiparty politics also               laws, such as similar prohibitions on hunting     dormant for more than four years. In an attempt
                 appropriate law can improve both conservation      meant that timber concessions could be used                   in buffer zones as in protected areas.            to implement them, government may resort to
                 and the lives of rural people if it sets in place  as a weapon to perpetuate political patronage                                                                   further administrative measures. But further
                 the correct incentives (FAO/UNEP, 1999). The       in favour of domestic and foreign pressure                    By contrast, the 1995 Wildlife Decree             complicating the regulatory framework for
                 1975 Parks and Wildlife Act gave landholders       groups. Evidence suggests that the 1994 Law                   introduced entirely new concepts of partici-      community wildlife management is unlikely to
                 the opportunity to manage wildlife for their       (or at least its provisions on devolution, and                patory wildlife management, despite its           result in effective implementation (Ngwasiri,
                 own benefit, on the assumption that ‘local         transparent and equitable management) was                     enactment to implement the wildlife provisions    1998). It would, if anything, increase scope
                 proprietorship of wildlife resources was likely    developed under pressure from foreign donors,                 of the 1994 Law. These included community         for discretionary and conflicting interpretations
                 to promote investment (of land, money, and         principally the World Bank – the agency                       hunting zones, equitable sharing of benefits      by literate community members, local elites and
                 time) for their efficient and sustainable          responsible for Cameroon’s Structural Adjust-                 from wildlife exploitation, the possibility of    State bureaucrats. This type of ‘legislative
                 management’ (FAO/UNEP, 1999). Under the            ment Programme (SAP) (Nguiffo, 1994;                          local councils managing hunting areas, and a      inflation’ only increases uncertainty (Fisiy,
                 Act, district councils were designated ‘appro-     Ekoko, 1999; Fombad, 1997). The Law was                       forward-looking definition of buffer zones.       1992) and, according to a World Bank study
                 priate authorities’ for wildlife management on     therefore enacted without the support of a                    Why did the 1995 Wildlife Decree depart from      of Cameroon’s legislative process, only leaves
                 communal lands, with government approval           strong domestic constituency of civil society                 the letter of the 1994 Law?                       ‘economic agents [unsure] of the exact scope,
                 and the full participation of communities.         organisations, politicians and younger, reform-                                                                 precise meaning or real impact of new
                 Project Windfall (Wildlife Industries New          minded forestry and wildlife staff.                           The operational division between the Forestry     legislation’ (cited in Ngwasiri, 1998).
                 Development for All) and the now famous                                                                          Department and the Wildlife and Protected
                 CAMPFIRE programme (Communal Areas                 The donor community closely monitored the                     Areas Department (DFAP) dictated that the         THE CONCEPT OF ‘COMMUNITY’ IN
                 Management Programme for Indigenous                drafting of the 1994 Law, in particular its                   wildlife provisions of the 1994 Law would be      WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT
                 Resources) provided significant support to the     provisions on forest exploitation. This explains              drafted by DFAP. This was undertaken by
                 reform process, and have delivered substantial     the unusual speed with which it was introduced,               senior DFAP staff, a majority of whom were        For the purposes of the 1994 Law and the
                 benefits for Zimbabwe’s rural population.          as well as the emphasis on sustainable logging                schooled in colonial-style wildlife policing and  1995 Wildlife Decree, a community must be a
                                                                    through long-term concessions, transparent                    who favoured preserving Cameroon’s existing       recognised legal entity. To obtain this status, a
                 To better understand the current state of          mechanisms for awarding exploitation titles by                system of wildlife governance. By contrast,       community must demonstrate proof of its
                 devolved wildlife management in Cameroon,          auction, the introduction of community forests                the 1995 Wildlife Decree was drafted by a         existence to the government. In and of
         2                                                                                                                                                                                                                                3
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...Rural development forestry network paper e the law communities and wildlife july management in cameroon samuel egbe a community model from mount kristin b olsen henry ekwoge rose m ongie james acworth ebwekoh o kah charles tako gorilla based tourism realistic source of dfid income case study villages goungoulou karagoua elias djoh mark van der wal hunting zones first steps decentralisation observations village djaposten contents page i ii iii koungoulou iv about authors is researcher lecturer faculty political science university yaounde soa consultant environmental he can be contacted at egbee yahoo com apo for resource seeking to integrate participatory monitoring evaluation into framework initiatives area manager onge mokoko working develop plan state forest reserve adjacent forests west coast implement approaches sustainable conservation adviser provides advice on process developing models broader systems land use strategies ensure long term maintenance biodiversity support local li...

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