Around 10,000 people in Ingouni-Moke and Olounou I, 250 km
(155 miles) north of the capital Brazzaville, have been in a
stand-off for more than a week with the elephants which have
laid waste their manioc fields. "There is a proliferation of pachyderms. Today we have
nearly 30,000 whereas in the 1980s we had only around 10,000,"
Forestry Minister Henri Djombo said.
"In most of the country's forested areas, the population is
complaining about the destruction of their fields by elephants
who come and eat their bananas and manioc."
Elephants are protected by law in Congo and there is little
under-resourced villagers can do to keep them at bay. In the
past some have burned bricks of dung mixed with chillis to
produce a pungent smoke which drives off the animals.
Forest elephants are smaller than their savannah cousins and
tend to be more reclusive, moving around in small groups rather
than large herds and generally avoiding contact with humans.
But a lack of food has driven them out of the rain forest
and towards tempting fields of bananas or rice. They can consume
about 500 kg (1,100 lb) per day.
CONSERVATION
Rampant poaching in the 1980s threatened to wipe out
elephant populations until an international treaty virtually
halted the worldwide ivory trade. Despite the destruction they
cause, Djombo said the Congolese were proud of their pachyderms.
"The law allows us to carry out authorised culls to dissuade
the animals but we use it very little," he said.
"Partly so as not to encourage poachers but also because we
consider the situation to be a positive result of our
conservation policy -- the proliferation of species said to be
threatened globally is a source of pride for our country."
During a 1997-1999 civil war, the population of Mbomo in the
north protected the Odzala national park from the bloodletting,
a marked contrast to neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo,
where nine rare mountain gorillas have been shot dead in a park
where armed militias roam.
A senior forestry ministry official has been dispatched to
Ingouni-Moke and Olounou I to lend "moral support" to the
villagers and assess the damage. Last year, the state paid 10
million CFA (US$20,690) in compensation to one locality alone.
"We envisage finding technical solutions, like barriers
sufficiently solid to stop the elephants getting to villages and
fields. But for the time being we are limiting ourselves to
compensation," Djombo said.
"Today, the population is a partner in conservation ... The
slaughter of protected animals is reported whenever it happens.
That is a sign of a real public awareness."