Protests as State moves giraffes to Coast

Rift Valley
By Antony Gitonga | Jan 24, 2024

The row between land owners in Naivasha and Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) over the translocation of giraffes has deepened.

The land owners have accused KWS of failing to follow the laid down procedures.

It has emerged that the wild animals are being transported to a private sanctuary in Mombasa.

A fortnight ago, KWS embarked on translocation of giraffes from North Lake Naivasha without engaging the land owners, who for years have fed and protected the animals.

KWS has confirmed the translocation of giraffes' to the Coast and admitted that there was a communication breakdown during the exercise.

The agency's Assistant Director Joseph Dadacha downplayed the row, saying KWS has since contacted the land owners who have given a go-ahead for the exercise with the first batch of three giraffes moved to the Coast.

"There was a communication breakdown during the start of the exercise, but this has since been addressed, and the translocation is going on smoothly," he said.

However, one of the landowners who declined to be named questioned the rationale of getting the animals from Naivasha, which was hundreds of kilometres away from Mombasa.

The rancher claimed that their investigations had established that the giraffes were being ferried to a private sanctuary owned by a senior government officer.

"In the past, we have worked with KWS in translocation of different species of animals, and we are wondering why the secrecy in this exercise," said the rancher.

Friends of Lake Naivasha chairman Francis Muthui, noted that there were tens of giraffes in Amboseli and Tsavo National Parks closer to Mombasa.

"The translocation of these giraffes is being undertaken in secrecy, and there are more questions than answers over this illegal exercise," he said.

Muthui said that the exercise had strained the good working relationship between the land owners who had protected the wild animals for years and KWS.

He revealed that some of the animals were being held in a holding area, awaiting the capture of others so that they could be ferried together.

"Over 80 per cent of wild animals in Naivasha are outside parks, and it's the land owners who use their sanctuaries to feed, water and protect them from the rising number of poachers," he said.

Share this story
New rules, same old suspects as Formula One revs up for 2026 season
The start of any Formula One season is a game of smoke and mirrors: this one, which gets underway in Melbourne on March 8, has the added intrigue of sweeping changes
Barca must 'make the impossible possible' vs Atletico, says coach Flick
Barcelona coach Hansi Flick has insisted his team could turn around a 4-0 deficit in the Copa del Rey semi-final tie against Atletico Madrid.
Liverpool's Slot says his 'football heart' does not like set-piece trend
Liverpool boss Arne Slot says that the growing reliance on set pieces in the Premier League has sucked some of the joy out of football but accepts it is the new reality.
Chelsea boss Rosenior warns players over discipline
Liam Rosenior has demanded an improvement in discipline from his Chelsea players after Pedro Neto became their ninth player to be sent off this season
Marathon champion Jeptoo, Were among 27 Kenyan athletes suspended for doping violations
Disgraced Kenyan marathon runner Rita Jeptoo, national 400m hurdles champion Wiseman Were, and 25 other athletes have been provisionally suspended for doping violations
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS