Kayanza : Deforestation of Kibira worries its residents
The natural forest of Kibira in its part of district of Matongo in Kayanza province (northern Burundi) is threatened. According to some sources, activists of the ruling party are cutting down trees in this forest to build houses under the complicit eye of local authorities. The Ministry of the Environment warns anyone who is caught cutting down these trees. INFO SOS Médias Burundi
According to information on site, the Kibira National Park is threatened by the surrounding populations that carry out activities inside the protected site.
“They cut down trees to build houses but also for firewood. There are also traditional practitioners who look for tree bark to treat certain diseases,” say residents of Matongo, who point out that most of the people who dare to cut down these trees are CNDD-FDD party activists, especially Imbonerakure (members of the party’s youth league) under the complicit eye of local authorities.
These residents are asking authorities to do everything they can to protect this park.
The district administration says it “bitterly notes the destruction of the Kibira” without however incriminating activists of the ruling party.
For its part, the Ministry of Environment warns the population that anyone caught cutting down trees in the Kibira “will be punished in accordance with the law governing forests in Burundi.”
You might also like
Bukinanyana: more than two hundred houses destroyed by torrential rains
220 houses and 7 classrooms demolished, several hectares of fields damaged, suggests a report of the damage caused by torrential rains mixed with hail this Tuesday September 12 and Wednesday
Mabayi : a gold miner missing and 15 others rescued from a pit on a mining site
A gold miner remains untraceable and 15 others were rescued from a pit on a mining site on Tuesday in the district of Mabayi in the province of Cibitoke (northwest
Muyinga: smoke from explosives used in gold mines causes fatal lung poisoning
Residents of Kamaramagambo hill in Butihinda commune, Muyinga province (north-eastern Burundi) say they are under threat of the smoke from explosives causing pulmonary poisoning as sounds of explosion disturb pregnant
