years

UWA acquires road equipment worth over $1m

Posted on : Friday , 23rd October 2015

The African Wildlife Foundation (AWF), through support from Usaid/Uganda Tourism for Biodiversity Programme (T4B), has donated road construction equipment worth $ 1,333,823(about sh4.8b) to Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA).

 
The equipment, which was handed over by T4B chief of Party, Kaddu Sebunya, to UWA’s Executive Director, Dr Andrew Sseguya, include a grader, a bulldozer, an excavator, a vibro roller, 2 tippers and 1 low bed transporter will help UWA to open and maintain more roads within protected areas to enable easier ecological monitoring and patrols and to address illegal activities especially in Kidepo Valley and Murchison Falls National Parks to areas where poaching still remains a threat.
 
“In the last three years, we have been working with UWA to improve park management and we are certain that this road equipment will address several challenges and ease accessibility for both deployment and monitoring. We are aware UWA has not received any brand new road equipment for over a decade and what they have were increasingly becoming a liability due to their high maintenance costs,” said Ssebunya.
 
UWA’s Executive director Andrew Sseguya said apart from opening and maintaining roads for monitoring and patrols, the equipment will also be used for fire management by opening up fire breaks, and human wildlife conflict mitigation through digging of trenches to deter elephants and other large mammals from getting out of the parks.
 
“Without good roads, management of the protected areas becomes difficult, more expensive and threats to wildlife increase as the staff are unable to address them in a timely manner. Activities such as patrols and monitoring are often hardest hit. It is necessary that a number of roads to be used for deploying patrols and undertaking various monitoring activities be opened and maintained,” Sseguya noted.
 
Sseguya also noted that the new equipment will also be handy in the excavation of water dams, particularly in Kidepo Valley National Park, which will keep the wildlife in the protected areas from straying into community land in search of water points.
 
Addressing guests, Shawna Hirsh, the equipment will help UWA Improve a network of monitoring tracks, as well as roads and fire lines, ultimately improving biodiversity management in areas of biological significance, and enable easier monitoring of illegal activities in the protected areas.
 
In her speech, Maria Mutagamba, Tourism Minister, noted that with the new equipment, they will improve vistor experience, minimizing the incidences of elephants raiding the crops of communities.

Source : in2eastafrica.net

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