South Africa’s Lions Prosper with Careful Watch and Fenceless Parks

At sunset, a buffalo calf’s distressed grunts reverberate through the bush.

But it’s a trick.

The grunts are blaring from a loudspeaker, designed to lure lions to a tree and let a South African wildlife reserve carry out a census of its apex predator.

As an added enticement, the carcasses of two impalas are affixed to a tree. The scent promises a fresh meal.

In the headlights of a 4×4, armed rangers with night binoculars and torches watch over the scene.

“We know our lions, but with this process, we verify them,” says Ian Nowak, head warden at the Balule Nature Reserve.

A wildlife researcher next to him listens intently, her ears tuned to clues from the nocturnal sounds.

That’s how she knows a rumbling is from elephants grazing in the tall grass. And that’s how she knows when to raise her camera to photograph lions, looking for distinctive scars or peculiar ears — anything that identifies them for the count.

This job requires patience. The team once spotted 23 lions ripping into the bait.

“They growl and they fight. Then they lie down and eat,” Nowak whispers. “It can be quite a frenzy on the bait. They smack each other and then settle down.”

Don’t fence them in

At 55,000 hectares (136,000 acres), Balule is huge — yet it connects with an even bigger ecosystem that, all told, is almost the size of Belgium.

Balule and other nearby game farms have transitioned into nature reserves, joining up with the Kruger National Park to create a vast territory without internal fences, covering 2.5 million hectares, that extends to Mozambique.

To create such enormous space for wildlife is a rare success story these days.

Conservationists meeting in Marseille, southern France, are deeply worried for Africa’s “big cats”, facing loss of habitat and human encroachment as well as poaching.

Balule is so big that its census-takers have to criss-cross the terrain to make the count as thorough as possible.

“Sometimes they’ve eaten. If they’re full, they don’t come,” Nowak said. “Especially the males, they’re lazy as hell.”

Twenty years ago, Balule was mostly farmland and lions were few.

Last year, the census found 156 of the lordly beasts.

“Lions are doing incredibly well, mainly because there’s a large enough space to operate,” Nowak says.

Overall, the news is good for lions in South Africa, thanks to government conservation efforts — helped by the inducement of tourists who are willing pay to see the animals. Private investors have also stepped in.

A years-long drought has also been a boost. Antelopes and buffalo did not have enough to eat, making them easier prey for large carnivores.

‘Lions don’t share’

The loudspeaker rumbles again with the recording of the injured buffalo calf. This time, a small jackal appears, hoping for a nibble. At the slightest sound, it dashes away.

The wildlife researcher detects another movement in her thermal binoculars. The headlights flash back on, illuminating the majestic mane of a lion approaching stealthily, careful but calm.

“He’s initially cautious,” says Nick Leuenberger, one of the regional wardens. “He doesn’t know if he’ll be walking in on another pride.”

“Lions defend their food, they don’t share,” he adds.

“Here the lion tolerates the jackal. He knows he’s not a major threat to his food source.”

Suddenly, the lion leaps up to one of the suspended impalas, biting into its belly. After his meal, he lies at the foot of the tree.

Now the team can move on. No other animals will dare approach.

The next night, seven hyenas take turns snipping at the fresh impala, without a lion in sight.

But on the way back, the 4×4 slams the brakes. To the left, a hippo roars furiously, its mouth wide open.

To the right, seven lionesses raise their heads above the grassline. A magical sight, but no danger to the hippo. Nowak says it would take at least twice as many lions to threaten the hippo.

The tension eases. A lion emerges from the brush and walks along the trail. A lioness joins him, and the 4×4 follows them slowly until they disappear into the night.

Source: Voice of America

Key Dates in Guinea Since Independence

Army officers on Sunday staged a coup in Guinea. Here are some key dates in the history of the troubled west African country since independence from France in 1958.

1958: Independence

On October 2, 1958, Ahmed Sekou Toure declares independence, a few days after a referendum rejected membership in a Franco-African community proposed by then French leader Charles de Gaulle.

Sekou Toure is elected president in January 1961. The country turns socialist in 1967.

Toure in power for 26 years

The “father of independence” becomes a Third World hero but turns into an iron-fisted ruler who is blamed for the disappearance of about 50,000 people, according to human rights groups. Hundreds of thousands flee the country.

1984-2008: Conte’s rule

On April 3, 1984, a week after Toure’s death, a military junta takes power led by Colonel Lansana Conte. He puts down a coup attempt in 1985 and a deadly army mutiny in 1996.

Conte is elected president in 1993 and reelected twice in votes disputed or boycotted by the opposition.

In early 2007, massive protests against the “Conte system” are put down, claiming more than 180 lives, according to humanitarian groups.

2008 coup

On December 23, 2008, soldiers seize power in a bloodless coup the day after Conte died of an undisclosed illness at age 74.

The government swears allegiance to the junta led by Captain Moussa Dadis Camara.

In September 2009, security forces open fire at a stadium where thousands of opposition members are holding a rally.

At least 157 people are killed and around 100 women are raped.

In December, junta chief Camara is wounded as his top aide shoots him in the head.

2010: Alpha Conde, first elected president

In January 2010, transitional President Sekouba Konate signs a deal with Camara, setting up a presidential election.

On November 7, Alpha Conde becomes Guinea’s first democratically elected president.

He survives unscathed when soldiers attack him at his home in the capital Conakry on July 19, 2011.

He is reelected on October 11, 2015, after polls marred by violence and fraud allegations.

2013: Ebola epidemic

An epidemic of the hemorrhagic disease Ebola breaks out that will last until 2016 and claim more than 2,500 lives.

Conde’s third term

Starting in October 2019, the prospect of a third term for Conde sparks fierce opposition, with dozens of civilians killed during protests.

A new constitution adopted on March 22, 2020, after a referendum boycotted by the opposition allows Conde to run for a third term.

Conde is declared the winner of a presidential vote on October 18, 2020, as top challenger Cellou Dalein Diallo and other rivals cry foul.

Source: Voice of America

Guinea Soldiers Claim They’ve Staged a Successful Coup

Members of the Guinea military staged an apparent coup Sunday, declaring on national television that they had arrested President Alpha Conde, dissolved the country’s constitution, and sealed off land and air borders.

The junta later announced a nationwide curfew, Agence France Press reported.

Conde’s whereabouts Sunday was not immediately clear. AFP reported that it had received a video of Conde, wearing a wrinkled shirt and jeans and sitting on a couch surrounded by soldiers. When asked by a soldier in the video whether he has been harmed in any way, Conde does not respond.

In October, the president won a third term in office after amending the constitution to allow him to run again. The controversial election sparked violent protests throughout the country.

Army Colonel Mamady Doumbouya, a former French legionnaire, appeared on national television Sunday, draped in the Guinea flag.

“We have dissolved government and institutions,” Doumbouya said. “We call our brothers in arms to join the people.”

Doumbouya cited mismanagement of the government as a reason for his actions. He calls his group of soldiers the National Rally and Development Committee (CNRD).

CNRD said on state television later Sunday that all governors had been replaced by military leaders, but that all outgoing ministers were invited to a meeting Monday at parliament.

“Any failure to attend will be considered as a rebellion against the CNRD,” the group said in a statement.

Fighting was reported earlier Sunday in Conakry, but following the announcement on television, many took to the streets to celebrate what they believed to be a successful coup.

International groups were quick to condemn the unrest in Guinea.

“I strongly condemn any takeover of the government by force of the gun and call for the immediate release of President Alpha Conde,” United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres wrote on Twitter.

ECOWAS Chairman and Ghana President Nana Akuffo-Addo condemned what he called an “attempted coup” in a statement released Sunday, calling for the unconditional release of Conde.

France also condemned the “attempted seizure of power by force” and called for Conde’s release, a Foreign Ministry statement said.

African Union leaders called on the body’s Peace and Security Council to meet urgently to discuss the situation.

Source: Voice of America

Tanzania Opposition Condemns Arrest of Chadema Party Members

Opposition and rights activists in Tanzania have condemned the arrest of several members of the country’s main opposition Chadema party, who were to hold a forum to discuss constitutional reforms. The action happened while Chadema leader Freeman Mbowe remains behind bars facing terrorism-related charges that his party has branded a bid by President Samia Suluhu Hassan’s government to silence the opposition.

The condemnations came after police in Musoma, a town in Mara region in the northern part of Tanzania, Saturday arrested nine members of the main opposition Chadema party who were organizing a symposium on a new constitution.

In a post shared on Twitter, the Chadema party said it was following the incident, which it said suppresses democracy.

The statement said, “We strongly condemn this blatant violation of the constitution and rule of law, sowing the seeds of hatred, discrimination, and discord within communities,” It also protested against what the party called the “suppression of democratic rights” by police and other security forces.

Speaking with VOA, Chadema party spokesperson Coast Zone Gerva Lyenda said the ongoing unrest is motivated by their demand for a new constitution.

Lyenda said that before the demand for a new constitution, there were no arrests. He said the problem is a new constitution, it’s their right and they will fight for it. Lyenda added that Chadema would like to obtain a new constitution without bloodshed.

Chadema is challenging the current constitution which was formed under a single-party system saying it favors the ruling Revolutionary Party.

A government critic such as Bob Wangwe sees the arrests as suppressing democracy in Tanzania.

He says the police forces want to control what citizens discuss and what they can do, while the constitution of the United Republic of Tanzania grants citizens freedom and the right to discuss issues that concern them. He urges President Samia Hassan to take the issue seriously since it tarnishes the image of the country.

Police declared the Chadema gathering on constitutional reform illegal and unconstitutional, pointing to Hassan’s remark that it is time to build the economy first.

“Discussions about the constitution will be resumed after the economy becomes stable, when the president decides that the situation is good, then the symposium about the constitution will be given a permit,” said Longinus Tibishubwamu, the head of police in Mara region. He added that if there is anyone trying to hold a constitutional forum now, he sees them as breaking the law.

Analysts say Hassan has started well but incidents like these show some weakness.

Political analyst Victor Kweka s`ays there is no president who is perfect, but there are weaknesses that can be avoided. He added that if the president has good advisers, she can implement her duties in a way that will show that she really intends to have a national unity government and a country to stand together as one on economic, political and democratic matters.

Meanwhile, opposition in Tanzania is still insisting that they will be continuing with their operation to exercise their democratic rights without fear from the state apparatus. For the president, building the economy is her first priority.

Source: Voice of America