The Inquirer is a leading independent daily newspaper published in Liberia, based in Monrovia. It is privately owned with a "good reputation".

In Cape Mount: Rights Group Threatens Lawsuit Against FDA

A local right group in Gola-Konneh District, Grand Cape Mount County, has threatened to file a lawsuit against the Forestry Development Authority (FDA) for its failure to control wildlife in the area.

According to the report, the Human Rights to Save Humanity (HRSH) call comes following years of complaints by residents of towns in the Gola Forest about the constant harassment and damage done to their farms and towns by marauding wildlife.

It said the latest complaint follows a hunger strike staged by hundreds of residents of the affected towns in the area to re-echo their calls for government’s intervention in curtailing wildlife invasions of their communities and farms.

During the strike staged last Friday, July 7, mainly by women and children, the residents threatened to constantly strike until the government intervenes in the wildlife invasion melee.

The Executive Director of HRSH, Elijah Gbanjah-Seh, told the local media in the county that government’s forest regulatory body has over the years failed to control the wildlife that encroach on residential areas and farms in Gola-Konneh District.

He said FDA has a park in the District, but it is yet to put proper mechanisms in place to control the wildlife, something which, he said, has resulted to the constant invasion of their dwellings by the wildlife.

Gbanjah-Seh said due to the constant invasion by wildlife, residents have been deprived of free movement.

“Government said we should protect the life of the animals which is fine; but equally so, the people who are supposed to manage the forest and animals are not doing well to protect us also,” he pointed out.

HRSH activist indicated that FDA has a park there but they are not able to put mechanisms into place to control the elephants; as a result our people and their farms have become vulnerable to wild animals because both bush cows and elephants are roaming all over the place.

“So we are already consulting our legal team so that we can file a lawsuit against the FDA for endangering the lives of our people and also causing them to starve,” he added.

He said in the lawsuit, they will seek restitution from FDA for all the damages that have been caused by the wildlife over the years.

“I don’t think the animals are more important than we the human beings. When a single animal is killed, Forest Rangers will come immediately, but even though we continue to cry, no action has been taken,” he lamented.

At the same time, the HRSH official is calling on the government of Liberia to find an alternative source of livelihood for people living in the heart of the Gola Forest that it has turned into a park.

According to him, the ongoing invasion will continue for years, adding that FDA is demonstrating no sign of containing the animals which are now reproducing in the area.

Earlier this year, the Commissioner of Gola-Konneh District, Arthur Konneh, expressed similar concerns about wildlife invasion in the district.

According to the Commissioner, over the past five years, there have been no proper farming activities in the District due to the threat posed by both bush cows and elephants.

He said residents have time without number abandoned their farms as a result of invasion by the wildlife.

The Gola-Konneh District Commissioner further stated that all the remedies suggested by conservationists cannot be achieved by the residents.

Konneh said conservationists have told them to constantly burn pepper in the forest and get honey bees in the towns to help drive the wildlife away.

However, the Commissioner disclosed that given the huge size of the Gola Forest, they cannot afford the quantity of pepper to spread all over the forest. He is, therefore, appealing to the government to intervene by bringing the situation in Gola Konneh District under control, as it is causing serious problem in the district.

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