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Mr Alan Rabinowitz inspects the goods at
an animal market in Kachin State. |
MR Alan Rabinowitz, an American wildlife biologist who has set
many milestones in his two decades working for the preservation
of tigers and other wild cats around the world, achieved yet another
hard-won goal on his most recent visit to Myanmar last month.
During an expedition to Kachin State that lasted from January
15 to 24, the 51-year-old conservationist helped the Myanmar government
put the finishing touches on the establishment of the Northern
Forest Complex, a 13,500-square-mile reserve that links four existing
protected areas he helped create.
Those areas are Hkakabo Razi National Park, Hponkan Razi National
Park, Bumphabum Wildlife Sanctuary and Hukawng Valley Tiger Reserve,
all established in northern Kachin State to protect a wide range
of wildlife but especially to preserve tigers from extinction.
“Our best estimate is that there are about 150 tigers
in the Hukawng Valley,” said Mr Rabinowitz, who is the director
for science and exploration for the Bronx Zoo-based Wildlife Conservation
Society. “There are also tigers in Tanintharyi Division,
and some in Htamathi [Sagaing Division] and other places around
Myanmar, so we think there are maybe no more than 200 or 250 in
the entire country.”
He said Hukawng Valley and Tanintharyi Division are the only
two areas in Myanmar with a good number of tigers because they
are still wild and not easy to access.
“Malaria is a big problem in Hukawng Valley so not many
people live there,” Mr Rabinowitz said.
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| A
tiger photographed in Hukawng Valley |
He said that last month’s trip was one of the best he has
had since he first came to Myanmar in 1993 to conduct wildlife
surveys.
“I could already see people and things changing in the
reserve. I saw less hunting. I saw no guns – which is good,”
he said.
However, getting to that point was far from easy for Mr Rabinowitz
and others who worked on establishing the protected areas, as
the project has involved long negotiations with local villagers.
“One of the rules is that we cannot make the people who
live there move out,” he said. “If we’re going
to protect an area we must help the people and the wildlife.”
Hukawng Tiger Reserve includes five townships, one of which
(Tanaing) is entirely within the boundaries of the protected area.
“It’s amazing!” he said. “A tiger reserve
where the normal ways of life for the whole township are maintained.
We’re taking a balanced approach . . . by asking locals
how much land they use and how much they need.”
“Conservation cannot work unless local people feel good
about what is happening around them,” he explained.
Making the reserves viable, however, has required local residents
to change their behaviour in some areas, such as hunting.
Mr Rabinowitz explained that tigers are not endangered because
people hunt them, but because locals have over-hunted large mammals
that tigers rely on as a food source.
“Tigers need to kill big things to eat, so when locals
kill all the sambar deer, wild pigs and barking deer, the tigers
starve,” he said, adding that if they don’t have food,
they don’t reproduce.
He said part of the conservation plan included differentiating
development zones from wildlife corridors where it is illegal
to cut trees or hunt.
“We’re trying to decrease hunting so sambar deer
can come back to a good number,” Mr Rabinowitz said. “Once
the population is high, the deer and pigs will start coming into
the development zones, where they can be hunted by locals.”
The main problem is not those who kill wildlife in order to
eat, but those who kill for commercial purposes. The situation
has been made worse by the opening of gold mines in the area,
as locals kill animals to sell to mineworkers.
“We don’t have to stop the people who are killing
wildlife in order to eat. What kills wildlife is commercialisation
– commercial sale of wildlife,” Mr Rabinowitz said.
“But now it’s getting better,” he said. “The
gold mines are almost finished, and the government plans to close
them all by 2007.”
In the meantime, he said villagers are being taught to raise
domestic animals as a food source.
“We’re bringing in pigs, and many of them have chickens
already,” he said. “But they don’t know how
to properly raise the chickens. They just let them run around
in the forest.”
“Many people are starting to raise goats, which is something
new. Goat meat is very good. And cows, but they don’t know
how to take proper care of them, so we are going to provide training.”
Mr Rabinowitz pointed out that another thing that keeps people
from hunting is education, reasoning that once children are educated,
they do not want to stay in the forest anymore.
“They don’t want to live off slash-and-burn agriculture
or hunting. They want to get a job working with computers in an
office, which is good for conservation,” he said.
Mr Rabinowitz said that the government has been very helpful
throughout the process of establishing the protected areas.
“The military inside the Hukawng Valley says they are
protecting the wildlife corridors. No matter how much development
there is, the animals will still have big forested corridors they
can use to cross from one side to the other.”
He said the Hukawng Valley is the only protected area in Asia
to have wildlife police.
“We have 50 policemen, real policemen, specifically called
wildlife police who only work for the Hukawng Valley Tiger Reserve.
Their job is to stop the sale of wildlife meat in the markets,”
he said. “And if anyone is caught killing a tiger, they
are put in jail.”
With all this work behind him, Mr Rabinowitz said there is still
more to be done to make sure the system is working.
“We’re putting up camera traps to document whether
more animals are coming back into these areas, and to see if our
efforts are working well,” he said. “We should see
changes in the tiger population within three to five years.”
An added bonus is that the project should provide a huge boost
to Myanmar’s tourism industry.
“The Hukawng Valley will be a perfect place for tourists:
People can ride elephants, take boat trips on the rivers, and
live with the local people,” he said.
In the midst of his work in Kachin State, Mr Rabinowitz has
not forgotten Tanintharyi Division in the southernmost part of
Myanmar. On his next visit to the country, he said, he will start
working on establishing protected areas for tigers there as well.
“The tigers will come back if we protect them,”
he said.