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Kidepo Valley - Africa’s best national park?

21/5/2014

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What should be the basis for comparing national parks and deciding which one is better? Their size? The number of species they support? The quality of their facilities? CNN Travel put Kidepo Valley National Park third on its list of Africa’s 10 best safari parks highlighting phenomenal wildlife and exclusivity. Kidepo Valley National Park is my Number 1 but for other reasons.  
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The rugged mountains and valleys of Kidepo, historical homeland of the Ik people, during drought conditions in 1981

Kidepo, which celebrated its 50th anniversary last year, was the first national park I visited in Africa when it was just 20 years old and I not much older. I was in Karamoja, helping in a small way with the famine relief operation - 1980 saw one of the world’s most terrible famines in which a fifth of the people of the affected region died.  

Despite the horror of the famine, perhaps even because of it, the beauty of the great open Kidepo valley with its herds of buffalo and zebra and slow moving giraffe and its vistas of distant mountains affected me deeply and remained with me.  Though I visited many wonderful parks in the following years, I always maintained that Kidepo was the best.  I was lucky enough to visit again some 15 years later, and was deeply affected again. Kidepo remains my favourite park in Africa.
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This photo looking out across the Kidepo valley was taken from Apoka Lodge, just a handful of simple rooms in 1981, run-down but still working.  Apoka Lodge today is a rather different affair. 

I had heard of Kidepo even before my visit. I had read Colin Turnbull’s classic book, The Forest People, a wonderful account of his time with the Mbuti people in the forests of the Congo.  It was clear that Turnbull had fallen in love with the Mbuti and their way of life.  The Mountain People, which I also read, is very different. 

The book covers Turnbull’s disturbing experiences studying the Ik people and describes their decline and disintegration. Turnbull believed that poverty and famine had created a community in which personal survival outweighed the social and cultural bonds.  Parents and children were abandoned to die when food was short. Kidepo had been the Ik's most important hunting and gathering grounds.  Creation of the national park in 1962 made a bad situation worse. The Ik were excluded from the valley and resources that might have made the difference between life and death for some.  

My visit to Kidepo Valley National Park and an encounter with members of the Ik taught me some important things. I learned it is easy to misunderstand people and situations.  The 1980 famine was much worse than the 1964 famine that Turnbull experienced, but the Ik I met were caring for their families just like anyone else. Turnbull controversially call for the Ik tribe to be dismembered in order to prevent their culture of personal survival from infecting others. Instead the communal spirit of humanity returned by itself. 
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Unlike the situation described by Turnbull in 1964, during the 1980 famine, I met Ik mothers, old and young, who had walked for hours and even days to bring their children into stations where they could access emergency food aid.

I also learned that conservation was not the unalloyed good I had taken it to be. My visit to Kidepo bought home the truth that protected areas can cause damage and suffering as well as joy. This was a relatively novel thought for me in 1981, but despite great changes to conservation thinking and practice, the costs of conservation remain a fact, and their impacts still fall mainly on local people.  

Perhaps I should call Kidepo one of Africa’s worst parks.  It contributed towards the suffering of the Ik. But the park has protect something of beauty and value of importance to the Ik as well as to me and other conservationists which might otherwise have been lost. The connections that gave meaning to Kidepo for the Ik can still be re-established.  
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    Links

    Thinking Like a Human
    Fauna & Flora International
    Poverty and Conservation Learning Group
    Mark Avery - Standing Up for Nature

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