Toute l'actu sur la protection de l'environnement

Tag: climate change in africa

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The conversion of forests to farmland has become the main driver of deforestation. According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), it is responsible for at least 50% of global deforestation, mainly for the production of palm oil and soybeans. In Africa, and more particularly in Cameroon and Benin, the industrial cultivation of oil palm, soybeans and cotton are the main factors of forest clearance. These crops occupy far more land than subsistence farming. All of which inevitably leads to land disputes between village communities and agro-industries.

Natives of Apouh in Ngog, a village located in the Edea 1st district, Sanaga-Maritime department, Littoral region of Cameroon, are still on a war footing with the Société camerounaise de palmeraies (Socapalm). The company has cleared almost 90% of the village to grow oil palm. Industrial farming deprives the local population of land needed for subsistence farming. “Socapalm has taken over all our land. Our houses are surrounded by oil palms. There's nowhere left for us to grow the food we're going to eat. On the few rare spaces we have left, the plantains and Cassava have been dried out by aerial pesticide spraying. We live in the village, but it's in town that we go to buy food", says Félicité Ngon Bissou, president of the Association of women living near Socapalm in Edea (AFRISE).

Félicité Ngon Bissou, president of the Association of women living near Socapalm in Edea (AFRISE)
Félicité Ngon Bissou, president of the Association of women living near Socapalm in Edea (AFRISE)

For the past ten years or so, industrial agriculture and rural farming have been at loggerheads in Apouh à Ngog. In April 2023, His Majesty Mercure Ditope Lindoume, the traditional ruler of this community of made of around 300 people, was taken to administrative custody on the instructions of Cyrille Yvan Abondo, Divisional Officer of the Sanaga Maritime department. The chief and his followers had fiercely opposed the replanting of palm trees behind their homes. "Our aim is not to block Socapalm's activities. We think that after more than 60 years of expropriation of our land, the company should free up at least the area around our houses, that is around 250 hectares, so that we can produce enough to eat”, maintains the 2nd degree chief.

His Majesty Mercure Ditope Lindoume, of Apouh à Ngog

For the past ten years or so, industrial agriculture and rural farming have been at loggerheads in Apouh à Ngog. In April 2023, His Majesty Mercure Ditope Lindoume, the traditional ruler of this community of made of around 300 people, was taken to administrative custody on the instructions of Cyrille Yvan Abondo, Divisional Officer of the Sanaga Maritime department. The chief and his followers had fiercely opposed the replanting of palm trees behind their homes. "Our aim is not to block Socapalm's activities. We think that after more than 60 years of expropriation of our land, the company should free up at least the area around our houses, that is around 250 hectares, so that we can produce enough to eat”, maintains the 2nd degree chief.

Spread over 58,063 hectares at its Edea site, Socapalm is 67.46% owned by Socfinaf, the Cameroonian subsidiary of the Socfin group (Société financière des Caoutchoucs), 22.36% is owned by the State of Cameroon, and the remaining capital has been listed on the Central African Stock Exchange (Bvmac) since 2009. In a reaction made available to us, the company denies any land grabbing, and says it operates sustainably and in the interests of the people living near its plantations. “We would like to point out that, as the legitimate owner of the land is the State of Cameroon, it alone has the power to decide on the updating of concession boundaries, and Socapalm cannot monopolise the land of neighbouring populations. In addition, contrary to allegations, there has been no rejection of any of the concessions. There are even fewer environmental hazards associated with aerial spraying. The company is audited several times a year by the certification body, by our consultant who has been working with us for several years, and of course by the authorities: the Ministry of the Environment, the Ministry of Industry and the Ministry of Agriculture", Socapalm defends itself.

For the time being, the residents of Apouh in Ngog are not giving up. They have to travel 7 kilometres from their homes through huge palm plantations to practise subsistence farming on 150 hectares of land. For them, this is an insult compared to the 58,063 hectares of land occupied by the agro-industry.

In the South, a palm grove is eating up 60,000 hectares of forest

We are in the southern region, and more specifically in the Ocean department, just a short flight from Edea. Here, the deforestation relationship between industrial agriculture and subsistence farming is more than topical. And it is once again the oil palm that is at the centre of the quarrels. National investors plan to produce 180,000 tonnes of palm oil a year thanks to the "Camvert" project, a monoculture oil palm plantation planned for 60,000 hectares (three times the size of the city of Douala) in the districts of Campo and Niete.


Camvert’s farm in Campo, South of Cameroon

At Camvert's head office in Yaounde, the capital of Cameroon, Mamoudou Bobbo, the company's Project Manager Officer, tells us that the project, launched in 2020, has already cleared nearly 2,000 hectares on the Campo site, for the planting of 250,000 palm oil seedlings.

The communities living in the vicinity of the project have had a difficult time due to it, despite the fact that they live mainly from fishing, hunting and gathering. "In the area destroyed by Camvert, we used to camp to hunt. We also went there to collect honey. Today, there's nothing left", says Henry Nlema, a member of the Campo pygmy community. For the few family farms that exist in Campo, daily life is no longer secured. The establishment of the palm plantation is causing wild animals, particularly elephants, to roam freely. "They wait until nightfall to come and eat the banana, Cassava and other plants that we grow behind our houses. We're really discouraged", says a woman in her fifties, sitting on a stool in her kitchen, which doubles up as her living room. 

The conversion of forests to industrial oil palm cultivation is on a massive scale in the Ocean department, in the southern region of Cameroon. Since 2018, Bagyeli pygmies in the Bipindi district have been opposing a presidential decree granting 18,000 hectares of their forest to Biopalm, another agro-industrial oil palm company.

In the Centre region, 18,700 ha of sugar cane are grown as a single crop.

His Majesty Benoît Bessala Bessala, 2nd degree chief of Nkoteng (a municipality in the Centre region of Cameroon), has a bitter tone when he talks about the agro-industry that has been operating in his locality since 1964. "Nothing is going right. I can't mince my words about that. The atmosphere is not serene between us, the indigenous populations, and the Société Sucrière du Cameroun (Sosucam). There are so many problems I can't list them all here. If you're coming from Yaounde, when you pass through Nanga-Eboko, you will have to block your nostrils, even though you're in the car. Our river is totally polluted. We can no longer fetch fish and no measures have been taken. You know, Sosucam are tough guys. This means that wherever we go to complain, nothing will be done", says the traditional authority indignantly, before casting his gaze towards the horizon in despair.

Located 136 km north-east of the city of Yaounde, the commune of Nkoteng's main commercial activity is agriculture, which employs more than 90% of the working population. Mechanised farming is practised by Sosucam, an agro-industrial sugar company specialised in the growing and processing sugar cane. The sugar cane plantation covers an area of nearly 18,700 ha (on two sugar sites, MBandjock and NKoteng) and has an annual production of nearly 105,000 tonnes of sugar. The company, which is 74% owned by the French group Somdiaa and 26% by the State of Cameroon, employs 6,000 workers, mainly locals.

Socapalm heath quarter in Bandjock

Despite the environmental impact denounced by local residents, the company is not the only one to have razed the local forest cover in order to set up operations, even though it has an environmental compliance certificate issued by the authorities. Through rural agriculture, practised with rudimentary technological means, the villagers are developing perennial crops. This is the case of Papa Lucas, a man in his sixties who owns 15 hectares of cocoa. "With this cocoa plantation, I've overtaken all those civil servants in Yaounde who do nothing in the office", he says, walking towards his pick-up and swinging his bunch of keys. Like him, many other locals are clearing the forest to grow not only cocoa, but also coffee and oil palm, which is now being introduced in the district, with over 40 hectares already planted. According to figures from the delegation of the Ministry of Agriculture in the Upper Sanaga department, current cocoa production is between 25 and 30 tonnes, while coffee production is around 7 tonnes.

Benin

In Benin, village communities are at the forefront of the conversion of forests to agricultural use. Here, 54.8% of the population practises agriculture, particularly cotton, which is grown on 90% of farms and accounts for almost 40% of foreign currency earnings. Benin is the leading cotton producer in West Africa, producing over 730,000 tonnes each year.

cotton farmers in Benin

On the question of whether subsistence farming or cash crop farming destroys more forest, the players are unanimous. Cash crops are responsible for deforestation in Benin. According to figures from the Beninese ministry responsible for the environment, nearly 100,000 hectares of forest are destroyed every year to expand cotton plantations, and to a lesser extent soybeans, rice, maize and palm oil. The communes of Banikora and Kandi, in the Northwest and North of Benin respectively, are the main cotton-producing areas.

Banikaora, is Benin's leading cotton-growing commune.

Banikaora, is Benin's leading cotton-growing commune. For the 2021-2022 season, this commune produced around 167,296 tonnes of cotton, or ¼ of national production, from an area of around 140,000 ha. That's a lot of space, and for the 1st Deputy Mayor of Banikaora, Sabi Goré Bio Ali, it's still not enough. "We're limited in terms of space, because there's the park and the Upper Alibori classified forest, which means we can't expand our plantations," explains the local councillor.

Banikora’s council

Banikora borders the Parc w and the Classified Forest of Upper Alibori But because of the protected status of these natural areas, and the government's firm stance, cotton growers are extending their plantations beyond the borders of the protected areas. "In the past, a farmer used to cultivate two hectares at most. But now, with the use of herbicides, everyone is growing up to 10 ha or even 20 ha. This is leading us to destroy the forest", admits Tamou Chabi, a cotton farmer in Banikaora.

 

Kandi

Kandi covers an area of 3,421 km2, with an estimated population of 177,683. Every year, the commune ranks second after Banikoara in terms of cotton production. At the end of the 2021-2022 season, the commune produced 68,000 tonnes of cotton from 71,000 hectares. Like Banikoara, it is part of the Alibori department, the agro-ecological zone of the cotton basin.

Kora Gounou, cotton producer in Kandi

There are 20,000 cotton growers in Banikoara, divided into 194 village cotton growers' cooperatives (CVPCs) Like Banikoara, Kandi also produces soybeans, rice and maize. According to the 1st Deputy Mayor of Kandi, we need to take a break from cotton production and come up with other alternatives for Benin's development. "In the past, we were able to tell you that the rains would come on such and such a date. But today, because the plant cover is not there, the weather forecasts are contradicted by the reality on the ground. I think that where we are now, we have to stop and think of another spare part", says Seidou Abdou Wahah, 1st Deputy Mayor of Kandi.

Civil society denounces industrial agriculture,

Djibril Azonsi, Managing Director of LE RURAL
Djibril Azonsi, Managing Director of LE RURAL

LE RURAL is an agricultural press group based in Benin. For some years now, it has been reporting on issues relating to agriculture, agribusiness, gender and development, research and innovation, health and nutrition and the environment. For its Director General, there is no doubt that cash crop farming is destroying the most forests in Benin. "Cash crops are essentially for commercial purposes. They are grown over large areas, unlike subsistence farming, which is intended to feed the family, and whose surpluses can be sold to cover other day-to-day expenses. It's true that to date there are no up-to-date figures on the spatial occupancy of each crop, but I think that cotton tops the list of crops that destroy the forest the most. Because it's one of the crops that requires a lot of land to be cleared", explains Djibril Azonsi, Managing Director of LE RURAL.

Aristide Chacgom, coordinator of Green Development Advocates (GDA)

In Cameroon, Aristide is one of the civil society players involved in the fight against deforestation. "I'd say quite bluntly that it's industrial agriculture that's destroying most of the forest. If you take, for example, the cocoa farming that some of our parents still practise in a rudimentary way, you will see that it does not totally destroy the forest, because cocoa is grown under shade. And even when forest communities practise agriculture, you will see that they still reserve forest areas for the collection of non-timber forest products or for traditional pharmacopoeia. Industrial agriculture, on the other hand, involves completely razing the forest, replacing it with non-natural vegetation, which in the case of Cameroon could be oil palm or rubber trees, the main crops grown by agro-industries. Or sugar cane", explains Aristide Chacgom, coordinator of Green Development Advocates (GDA). 

Public authorities advocate agroforestry

Gaston Dossouhoui, Benin's Minister of Agriculture

In Benin, where we were able to meet the Minister of Agriculture, there is a growing awareness of the damage caused to forests by both cash crops and subsistence crops. "It's very common to see that the conversion of forests to farmland is gradually pushing us towards desertification, which will eventually starve us out. But you have to produce. I agree with you that family farming, practised on small areas, causes less damage to forests, it seems, but it does cause damage all the same. Because the way we farm, the way we clear land, the burning we do, the trees we incinerate so that our yams get the sun they need for proper tuberisation, is already deforestation. The problem is not just the scale used for certain industrial crops, but the method. For nearly 30 years we've had ample proof that if you have 40 well-distributed shea plants on a cotton field, you won't affect the yield. So what can we do to get this logic into the heads of our farmers? That's the whole debate," says Gaston Dossouhoui, Benin's Minister of Agriculture.

For the member of the government, the urgent task is to reduce the impact of agriculture on forests, without however trying to find out which type of agriculture destroys nature the most. To reconcile food production and forest preservation, in addition to agroforestry, the Beninese Ministry of Agriculture is advising farmers to use sowing techniques that do not require soil disturbance. Alternating certain crops on the same soil also helps to preserve its fertility. This is the case with yams and local crops such as Moukono and kajanus.

Fanta Mabo, Didier Madafime and Bernadette Nambu, with the support of the Rainforest Journalism Fund and the Pulitzer Center.

CAMEROON-BENIN: conversion of forests, industrial agriculture takes precedence over subsistence farming.

The conversion of forests to farmland has become the main driver of deforestation. According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), it is responsible for at least 50% of global deforestation, mainly for the production of palm oil and soybeans. In Africa, and more particularly in Cameroon and Benin, the industrial cultivation of oil palm, soybeans and cotton are the main factors of forest clearance. These crops occupy far more land than subsistence farming. All of which inevitably leads to land disputes between village communities and agro-industries.

Des difficultés d’accès en carburant dans les principales villes du Cameroun relancent le débat de la dépendance aux énergies fossiles sur fond de fin de COP28 à Dubaï…

Par LEONEL AKOSSO 
Cette semaine a démarré sans faire le plein de carburant. Ceci en raison de la difficulté pour les usagers de s’approvisionner dans les stations-service des principales villes du pays. Et à l’observation des tensions économiques et sociales déjà en gestation à la défaveur de cette crise que l’on dit passagère, il est clair que l’abandon du pétrole débattu tout au long de la COP 28 terminée à DUBAÏ le 12 décembre 2023 n’est pas la priorité du citoyen camerounais lambda.
Nous sommes à Ndokoti, un point carrefour de la ville de Douala. Ce 11 décembre 2023, il est 16 heures. La très spacieuse STATION TRADEX qui domine ce secteur est saturée. Une file indienne composée de motos-taximens armés chacun d’un bidon d’eau minérale vide d’une capacité de 10 litres fait la queue pour se faire servir en super. S’ils sont contraints de délaisser ainsi leur mouture, c’est non seulement en raison du rationnement orchestré par les stations-service qui, faute d’avoir été suffisamment approvisionnés, ne distribuent que 02 litres maximum de carburant par client. Les pompistes témoignent que  » les réserves de gazoil sont pratiquement épuisées quoiqu’encore disponibles le matin ». Comme au carrefour Ndokoti, c’est le même scénario qui se joue dans d’autres lieux d’approvisionnement des villes de Douala, Yaoundé, Bafoussam, Ebolowa et ailleurs.
Pourtant, dans un communiqué publié par le Ministre de l’Eau et de l’Energie, Gaston Eloundou ESSOMBA se veut rassurant. Il affirme :  » cette perturbation a pour principale cause le retard dans l’arrivée de trois navires transportant ledit produit, dû aux conditions mété-océaniques défavorables qui ont interrompu les chargements ship-to-ship desdits navires pendant 04 jours au port-hub de Lomé  ».
La communication du Ministère de l’Eau et de l’Energie annonce également que l’un des navires est déjà au quai de Douala avec 13000 m3 de super et qu’un chargement de 81 camions citernes a été engagé sous la coordination de la SCDP ( Société Camerounaise des Dépôts Pétroliers) pour acheminer la cargaison vers l’arrière-pays. Une version officielle contestée par plusieurs commentateurs.
Toujours est-il que les pénuries observées dans la distribution de carburant au Cameroun sont récurrentes dans notre pays, bien que selon les autorités publiques, il n’est pas question de parler de  »pénurie de carburant  » mais plutôt de  »perturbation » dans la distribution. Le constat effectué sur le terrain porte le super en tête des produits pétroliers connaissant un réel déséquilibre de stock dans les stations-service en ce moment.
De quoi perturber également les équilibres économiques et sociaux en cette fin d’année. Pour certains, cette rareté du carburant a été l’occasion de faire de la surenchère : les prix du transport ont subi une hausse spectaculaire dans la ville de Douala. Pour rallier le quartier YASSA au carrefour ANGE RAPHAËL, dans la zone universitaire de Douala, il fallait débourser 1000 FCFA pour s’offrir le luxe d’être  »bâchée » sur une motos-taxi . C’est dire que l’heure est grave…
L’heure est d’autant plus grave que la COP28 s’achève à Dubaï sur une fausse note. Annoncée comme étant la date et le lieu d’un tournant radical des énergies fossiles vers les énergies renouvelables, ce rendez-vous environnemental mondial a plutôt été le théâtre de l’hégémonie du pétrole depuis la désignation d’un patron d’entreprise pétrolière pour présider cette Conférence jusqu’à la pression exercée par le chef de l’OPEP ( Organisation des Pays Exportateurs de Pétrole) sur plusieurs pays producteurs de l’or noir comme l’Arabie Saoudite, l’Iran ou la Koweït en leur intimant l’ordre de ne pas valider toutes résolution impliquant la sortie du pétrole à courto ou à moyen terme. Autant d’annonces qui laissent à penser que malgré les alertes lancées tant par le monde scientifique que par les militants écologistes, l’industrie du pétrole a encore de belles années devant elle.
Et le CAMEROUN devrait en profiter puisqu’il a plus que jamais besoin du pétrole pour approvisionner les moteurs de la prospérité économique de sa jeunesse au chômage. Les crises répétitives de pénurie de carburant doivent nous inciter à prendre exemple sur l’entrepreneur nigérian ALIKO DANGOTE qui vient de doter son pays d’une raffinerie de pétrole. Un tel projet, en plus de créer des emplois au Cameroun, réduirait considérablement notre dépendance vis-à-vis des importations de pétrole raffiné, depuis l’étranger.

The fund designed to finance climate « loss and damage » in vulnerable countries was adopted on Thursday 30 November 2023, on the first day of the 28th United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP28) in Dubai. The establishment of this fund is the practical expression of the main promise made at COP27 in Egypt, where the mechanism was approved in principle but not adopted. Nearly six countries have already announced their contributions to this fund, but we are still a long way from the 100 billion dollars expected by developing countries.

This is good news for African countries. The fund designed to finance climate « loss and damage » in vulnerable countries was adopted on Thursday 30 November 2023, in the early hours of the 28th United Nations Climate Conference (COP28), which is being held in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates until 12 December 2023. This historic decision, which was greeted by a standing ovation from delegates from the nearly 200 participating countries, implements one of the main resolutions of COP27 in Egypt last year, where the fund was approved in principle, but its much-debated contours had not yet been defined.
« I congratulate the parties on this historic decision. It’s a positive signal for the world and for our work. We have made history today… The speed with which we have done so is unprecedented, phenomenal and historic », declared Sultan Al Jaber, the Emirati President of COP28.
According to the text adopted, the loss and damage fund is due to start operating in 2024. It will be hosted for four years by the World Bank, although this is contrary to the wishes of developing countries. The latter had opposed this option, criticising the financial institution for being in the hands of Westerners and unsuited to their needs.
All eyes on the $100 billion mark
Once it was adopted, the Fund for Loss and Damage began to be set up as soon as possible. The United Arab Emirates immediately announced a contribution of 100 million dollars. Germany followed with the same amount. Japan pledged 10 million dollars, the United States 17.5 million and the United Kingdom 40 million pounds (around 50 million dollars). According to several European Union (EU) negotiators, France and Denmark are on the verge of announcing an initial start, « in the region of a few hundred million dollars ». In addition, the European Commission and other EU member states have pledged contributions. However, industrialised countries and companies still have until 2 December 2023 to declare their bids.
On the ground in Dubai, negotiators from developing countries are now wondering how much the Loss and Damage Fund will be endowed with. The amounts announced so far are still far from the 100 billion dollars expected by the nations with the lowest CO2 emissions.
                                                                                                                                                                                      Boris Ngounou

COP28: will the loss and damage fund reach the $100 billion mark?

The fund designed to finance climate « loss and damage » in vulnerable countries was adopted on Thursday 30 November 2023, on the first day of the 28th United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP28) in Dubai. The establishment of this fund is the practical expression of the main promise made at COP27 in Egypt, where the mechanism was approved in principle but not adopted. Nearly six countries have already announced their contributions to this fund, but we are still a long way from the 100 billion dollars expected by developing countries.

Protection de la planète, les dirigeants du monde se réunissent à Dubaï dès ce jeudi 30 novembre, pour évaluer et améliorer la lutte mondiale contre le changement climatique. Il s’agit de la 28e conférence des Nations unies sur le climat dénommée COP 28. Le Cameroun, pays membre du bassin du Congo, entend capitaliser l’apport climatique de sa forêt. Comme tout le reste des pays africains, le Cameroun attend des pays industrialisés, les fonds nécessaires à la lutte climatique.
Le Cameroun a besoin de financements climatiques d’un montant global de 58 milliards de dollars, soit 35 mille milliards de FCFA, ce qui représente près de 5 fois son budget pour l’année 2023. C’est carrément une somme hors de portée pour un pays à revenu intermédiaire, qui peine déjà à financer des secteurs existentiels et indispensables tels que la santé, l’alimentation, l’éducation et l’accès à l’électricité.
Le Cameroun, comme tous les autres pays africains saisissent dont l’occasion de cette 28e conférence des Nations unies sur le climat (COP28), pour demander, une fois de plus aux pays riches et industrialisés de tenir leurs engagements, conformément à l’accord de Paris sur le climat. Le traité international adopté en 2015 lors de la COP 21 tenue en France, prévoit que les États les plus riches apportent chaque année 100 milliards de dollars de financement climatique ainsi que 40 milliards de dollars supplémentaires pour aider les pays en développement à s’adapter au changement climatique. Mais 8 ans plus tard, cette disposition n’est toujours pas respectée.
Si les pays riches ont l’obligation d’apporter les financements climatiques dont ont besoins les pays pauvres, c’est parce qu’ils sont les principaux émetteurs de gaz à effet de serre. Hors l’Afrique qui ne contribue qu’à peine 4% des émissions mondiales de gaz à effet de serre, est malheureusement le continent le plus vulnérable aux effets du changement climatique.
Au Cameroun, la perturbation des saisons, les phénomènes météorologiques extrêmes tels les inondations et les sécheresses prolongées, affectent près de 40 % de ménages. Les femmes, particulièrement celles vivant dans des zones affectées par les conflits ou appartenant à un groupe autochtone, sont plus sévèrement touchées par le changement climatique car elles représentent 75 % des travailleurs dans le secteur agricole informel et elles sont les principales responsables du bien-être de leur ménage et de sa sécurité alimentaire.
Le premier poumon écologique de la planète
C
’est donc pour pallier cette situation que le Cameroun a besoin de financements climatiques à hauteur, rappelons-le, de 35 mille milliards de Fcfa. Des fonds destinés à la mise en œuvre de sa contribution déterminée au niveau national (CDN). Un document de stratégie climatique dans lequel le Cameroun s’engage à réduire de 35 % ses émissions de gaz à effet de serre d’ici à 2030. Le pays entend se focaliser sur l’agro écologie, les énergies renouvelables, le secteur des déchets ainsi que la gestion durable de ses 22 millions d’hectares de forêts, soit près de 46% de sa superficie totale.
Et en parlant justement de forêt, le Cameroun, tout comme les 5 autres pays du bassin du Congo, détiennent un avantage de choix dans la mobilisation de la finance climatique. Deuxième plus grand massif forestier au monde après la forêt amazonienne, le bassin du Congo joue un rôle capital dans la réduction du réchauffement climatique. C’est d’ailleurs selon des scientifiques, le plus import site d’absorption du CO2 atmosphérique, C’est le premier poumon écologique de la planète, sa préservation est dès lors, une impérative.
                                                                                                                                                                                       Boris Ngounou

CAMEROUN, quels enjeux à la COP28

Protection de la planète, les dirigeants du monde se réunissent à Dubaï dès ce jeudi 30 novembre, pour évaluer et améliorer la lutte mondiale contre le changement climatique. Il s’agit de la 28e conférence des Nations unies sur le climat dénommée COP 28. Le Cameroun, pays membre du bassin du Congo, entend capitaliser l’apport climatique de sa forêt. Comme tout le reste des pays africains, le Cameroun attend des pays industrialisés, les fonds nécessaires à la lutte climatique.

Un présumé trafiquant d’ivoire, pris dans les mailles de la Direction Générale des Recherches du Woleu-Ntem à Oyem au nord du pays.
Dans le cadre d’une mission menée ce 27 novembre 2023, les agents de la DGR d’Oyem ont effectué une descente ciblée dans un quartier de la ville, aboutissant à l’interpellation d’un individu en début d’après-midi. Cette intervention a conduit à la saisie de deux pointes d’ivoire lissées.
Précisons que le Nord du pays constitue la porte de sortie pour l’ivoire du Gabon, qui est très généralement exporté vers le Cameroun comme l’ont déjà confirmé de nombreuses arrestations de ce type.
Présentement en garde à vue, l’individu répondant aux initiales N.F., est un menuisier âgé de 27 ans et de nationalité camerounaise.
Cette nouvelle arrestation a été possible grâce à la collaboration entre les services des Eaux et Forêts, en particulier la Direction de la Lutte Contre le Braconnage et la Direction Provinciale des Eaux et Forêts du Woleu-Ntem, ainsi que la DGR, appuyés par l’ONG Conservation Justice.
Conformément à l’article 390 du code pénal, le présumé trafiquant risque jusqu’à 10 ans d’emprisonnement en plus des amendes et dommages et intérêts en accord avec la législation en vigueur dans notre pays.
Cette initiative démontre l’engagement résolu des autorités locales et des organisations partenaires dans la lutte contre le trafic de faune, en vue de préserver la biodiversité et de faire respecter la loi.
                                                                                                                                                                            Conservation Justice