/ 19 August 2007

UN team probes shooting of DRC mountain gorillas

A joint mission of several United Nations agencies is conducting an emergency investigation into the shooting of endangered mountain gorillas in a Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) national park, the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (Unesco) said on Saturday.

In the past two months, seven of the primates have been killed in separate incidents in the Virunga park in the north-eastern DRC, a world heritage site and tourist attraction, the UN cultural agency said.

The mission is being mounted by Unesco, the World Conservation Union, the UN Environmental Programme and the Congolese Institute for the Conservation of Nature.

”Working with local authorities and partners in the field, the members of the mission will investigate the reasons for the targeting of the mountain gorillas whose population in the park is estimated at 370 [out of a total of 700 mountain gorillas worldwide],” Unesco said.

It called the ”apparently senseless slaughter” of gorillas in Virunga ”a blow for the preservation of mountain gorillas and a setback for conservation efforts at the world heritage site”.

On the basis of its findings, the mission will propose measures for the protection of the mountain gorillas and for the improvement of the conservation of the site.

”There is grave concern for the mountain gorillas as the latest killings are inexplicable: they do not correspond to traditional poaching where animals are killed for commercial purposes,” Unesco said. ”Furthermore, the killings have taken place despite the increased guard patrols and the presence of military forces in the area.”

The UN mission in the DRC says the preservation of the country’s natural resources is vital for the economy and the income of local people, thanks in particular to tourism.

Unesco said that ”in view of the fact that the five world heritage sites of the DRC have had to be placed on the World Heritage in Danger List, and of the recent deterioration in Virunga”, it plans a high-level meeting in the autumn to examine ways to improve the situation. — Sapa-AFP