Nature Cameroon is a non-governmental organization. Main goal is to contribute to sustainable development and biodiversity conservation in Cameroon.
The aim of this blog is to promote Nature Cameroon to the public who concern environmental issues in Cameroon. And to share the ASA volunteers 3-month volunteering experience in the Nguti town, SW Region in Cameroon.
This morning I received an email from my formal project supervisor Dominic Ngwese, who works for Nature Cameroon as a president for the last 7 years. He sent me a message and told me to read about the bad news of Nature Cameroon, an environmental NGO where I did my 3-month internship last summer. Not long ago, I was reading a blog from Greenpeace International. They reported on Nature Cameroon's effort to hold meetings in communities with Greenpeace and local villagers and tried to stop the land grab scandal of the Herakles Farm. I still cannot accept what I was told. It cannot be true...
Nature Cameroon was holding community meetings (Picture from Greenpeace Intl.)
Here I refer to the message from Dominc, as I read along I think the email was adapted from a´message disseminated by a third person. On Sept 11th 2013, Divisional Officer of Nguti sub-division (SW Region) Mr Kombe Henry Pasang signed decision 00196 SUSPENDING THE ORGANISATION NATURE CAMEROON
It has been confirmed that the Government of Cameroon's local administration has suspended the activities of the officially registered local grassroots NGO Nature Cameroon who have been holding a series of sensitisation and capacity building meetings in all the villages that will be affected by the proposed Herakles Farms oil palm project in the area.
It is unbelievable that the administration would stoop so low as to cut off civil society from carrying out its basic functions. Nature Cameroon, founded in 2004 in Nguti, is now banned in its home town for “repetitive holding of public meetings”. Nature Cameroon was set up “to carryout environmental education, to collaborate with forest adjacent communities, and to promote collaborative natural resource management”. It is now being banned for doing the very thing that the administration authorized it to do. It appears that the administration do not want the people’s eyes to be open about this new project! Why would that be? Is it because of the widespread allegations of corruption, human rights abuses and numerous violations of Cameroon's laws?? Could be.....
By way of an update - as of Sept 12th 2013, the Government of Cameroon have not yet issued Herakles Farms with a Presidential land lease for their proposed project. I guess Nature Cameroon must have been doing something right / pressing all the right buttons to get this kind of "silencing" reaction! This email is just to inform you of the actions of the Government against civil society. Please rally to the support of Nature Cameroon and its President and CEO Mr Dominic Ngwese ( naturecameroon1@gmail.com ). We must stand up for the rights of Cameroonian civil society to speak and to educate rural communities on their rights. I am very sorry for what's happened with Nature Cameroon. I hope they will gain back their freedom to fight for sustainability of the country and its people, very soon.
In the southwest region of Cameroon, a New York-based agri-corporation, Herakles Farms, its local subsidiary SG Sustainable Oils Cameroon (SGSOC), and a US non-profit organization All for Africa are involved in a land deal that is about to destroy over 70,000 hectares (300 square miles) of rainforest and the livelihoods of thousands of rural Cameroonians. If the project goes forward, farmland and forest will be replaced by a giant palm oil plantation.
There are known and affordable alternatives to this industrial project if one wants to really promote sustainable agriculture and human development in the area. In the three Herakles Farms’ nurseries, thousands of seedlings are ready to be planted. If the company truly wants to promote sustainable agriculture, it must hand over these seedlings to the local farmers and allow them to grow palm in a sustainable way, which should rely on diversified and environment friendly agricultural production.
Herakles Farms land grabbing activities now are at an alarming rate. To secure land and livelihoods of farmers and rural communities in Cameroon, please share with NATURE CAMEROON any urgent funding source to enable us have funding to assist in the education of the communities.
Part of the ASA Program is
to share of my experience in the 3rd world, from the Global South's point of
view, to the people or community around me. I can't do something big, like
change the world (that's one of the slogans of ASA ), or change people's perspectives,
or talk about moral issues like Europe's development aids in Africa or stuff
like that. And here it came the chance for me to share my intern
experience to my peers, students from the master program of Sustainable
Resource Management. Basically, during the year we organize activities that
bring us the SRMies together, like movie nights, dancing club and internship
sharing evenings. And last Thursday I was speaking to some 1st semester peers
about the ASA, and just gave a general overview of what I had done in Cameroon.
It turned out that it's not that easy to explain the ASA program and the whole
learning cycle of 3 seminars, one overseas project in a host country(in Africa,
Latin America, South Asia or Eastern Europe). When I showed the picture of
Nguti, the village where I stayed and worked in Cameroon. In the picture it
shows some simple wooden cottages and grocery stores on the main junction, and
it's the town centre. People got interested and asked "how could you
survive there for 3 months?" "Is this village electrified?" “You
took cold water shower for 3 months?" "None anit-Malaria tablets and
you didn't get Malaria at all? (Yes!). And I was showing pictures of activities
we had done there, like going to cocoa farms, palm oil farms, meeting with
farmer's groups and the Nguti council village chiefs, wedding
and funerals. There are just some highlights, and of course there were
moments of downs and uncertainties. Like cultural adjustments, different
values judgment, how did I learn to get along with the
"TIA"(this is Africa) attitude and get easy with life. One girl asked
a question, which I can't give a satisfactory answer at all. She was wondering
as a foreigner (at least the locals classified me as White man, a term that I
feel I was discriminated against...) in Cameroon, were there moments people
just ask me for money or help, because they assume I can offer? It
was in this context that i came across the moments I can't correctly identify
common greed or real in need in others. And she asked, "Do you think you
have changed somehow after the trip?" umm..I can say my vision might be
changed, the way I perceive the world, black and white, the power relation,
rich and poor. Now when I see people here in Germany in this civilized
materialistic world, great consumption (see the long queues in shops people
rush to buy unnecessary stuff for x'mas), I can no longer take it anymore. I
have a bad feeling when seeing people carry plastic shopping bags on both
hands. And when I look back, people in Africa (or in Cameroon to be more
correct) live a more happy life because they demand less, and I appreciate they
can get food out of their farmlands, bananas, pepper, potatoes, tomatoes, all
are self-subsistence. They are s creative and make things out of raw materials
manually, like brooms from palm tree's leaves. The other day I was watching a
video made by students from a Germany University. It shows their experimental
trial run of live a "sustainable life" for one whole month. Take cold
shower; only buy regionally produced food without package at all; create their
own solar cooking device and fry eggs on it; light up candles for study light
at night; make DIY soap and grow their own gardening plants. This is the kind
of life people in rural communities in Africa are doing. So, can I say they
live a more sustainable life then us, people who buy organic food just believe
it's good for the land the environment, without checking it's from the other
side of the world that carries great CO2 footprint? At least kids there know
where does the water come from, not saying it's from the tap. But it's a pity
that my stay there was relatively short, and my work was only in planning
level, but not really implemented. I wish I could go back there one day, to
this peaceful land and meet again nice people out there, maybe work on a
development project to help the small holder farmers.
local way of pressing oil out of the palm nuts
I think it's good to do
this sharing events with my study peers. Today we had another movie night
gathering, and we showed a documentary about land-grabbing issue which is
happening in West Africa, and with a special case study in SW Cameroon. We gave
a short introduction presentation on palm oil plantation in the country, and I
showed a couple of pictures to explain how is palm oil produced in a traditional manual way, and it exits
in our daily food like crackers vegetable oil we eat, soaps or cosmetics these
by-products of palm oil that we use. This land grab issue effects lives and
livelihood of so many small farmers in these developing countries, and since
2001, 227 mil ha of land has been sold or leased worldwide to international
investors or intensive plantation companies. Especially in Africa,
agricultural land of small farmers and their land rights are neglected, or sold
in ridiculously low price. I just learned about the case in Cameroon, there is
this US company Herakles Farm they want to invest and grab 70,000 ha land in the
forested protected area in the country, which means more than thousands of
farmers will lose their land for planting crops to sustain their families. It's
sad, but if the Cameroonian government is in line with this US company, which
happens in most cases of land grab issues, what can the local farmers do? Even
their own country can't protect their land right and secure its people's food
production. We had some nice reflections and discussion after the movie
session, it's so nice that we talked about some push and pull factors of this
land grab phenomenon in developing countries, and does industrial
plantation really brings local economic development to the people. What I like
about SRMies is that, people are creative and critical. Some of us even think
about stop buying crackers or consume less palm oil by-products to confront the
global trend of soaring palm oil consumption. And some gave other
very constructive ideas or opinions.
freshly harvested palm nuts
women are selecting the females seeds from the male ones, which are
for propagation of palm trees for palm oil production
after meeting picture with Ntale farmer's group and the Chief
After meeting - A taste of Cameroonian Makiro fish with rice
In Ntale village, cocoa beans drying drum donated by EU
Always not easy to travel during rainy season
We asked questions to the cocoa farmers,
in both Pidgin English and formal English :)
Cocoa trees - yellow pods are ready to be harvested!
one day trip to the crater latke Bermin Lake - beauty as those lakes in the Switzerland
take a quick glimpse of the Wednesday morning market
Cocoa
plantation (theobromo cacao Linn) is one of the main tree-based system in West
Africa. In Cameroon, average yields of cocoa are low because of several
reasons: the farmers tend not to use synthetic fertilizers to increase
productivity, and aging of cocoa plants, lack of means to tackle pest and
diseases. Production of cocoa depends largely on small holders cocoa producers.
And because of lack of marketing knowledge and business management skills, many
of theses smallholders farmers are exploited by the middle-men or licensed
buying agencies (LBAs) when they sell their dried cocoa beans to these small
buyers, who will use false weight to deceive the farmers. Since the
liberalization of the cocoa purchasing market, there are no more fertilizers or
chemicals subsidies for the farmers. In order to get to know the current
problems faced by local farmers and encourage the farmers organised to get
technical and financial support by forming farmers group or cooperatives, 2
weeks ago, Nature Cameroon held meetings with cocoa farmers groups in 4
villages in the Nguti Subdivision : Bambe/ Ntale/ Mungo Ndor and Ekenge. On the
Monday of 8th October, we took a 4-wheels vehicle (locally called
“pick up”, at the back of the truck you can fill up with 20+ passengers and a
heap of goods and luggage. The first meeting was held in the Chief Palace of
the village Ntale, more than 40 farmers attended the meeting and they are all
belonged to 2 cooperatives. We prepared a questionnaire with a list of
questions concerning productivity, working condition and marketing issues. We
also tried to find out the organisation problems of the cooperatives and see if
we can look for solutions together. To sum up problems faced by the cooperative
groups:
1)Evacuation
of dried cocoa beans during the rainy season from July till end of October
because of bad road systems that connect the villages and the main town e,g,
Komba, where all cocoa transactions are done here and beans are sent to Douala
Port for export.
2)Farmers
are lack of means of transportation and delivery of their dried beans become
impossible.
3)Lack
of management trained staff or expertise in the cooperatives. Farmers don’t
have knowledge on managing their business and they are constantly treated by
small local buyers.
4)No
first hand market price information, and lack of stable electricity supply in
villages is the key issue.
5)Expensive
chemicals in the market and threat of pest and diseases such as fungi infection
of black pod disease.
6)Lack
of financial means to enable the farmers to put forward further measures to
improve farm management and planting materials.
We talked
with the grass-root farmers and collected all necessary information from them,
we will find ways to collaborate with the Nguti Subdivision Agriculture
Delegate to get technical support and our ultimate aim is to look for better
buyers such as exporter, to deal directly with the farmers. So that the they
can earn the best out of their produce, and are able to pay for school fees for
their kids.
The
villagers are very welcoming and they prepared fests for our visit. The Chief
of the villages attended the meetings and I feel that they have high
expectations from us. I totally felt the weight behind all the warm welcoming
and food, and I hope that we will work hand in hand with farmers, farmers
groups and regional platforms to influence decision making and work for the
economic benefits of the farmers.
I spent 4
days in the villages and stayed in Ntale, a focal point among all villages that
we visited this time. It was not funny and enjoyable to travel on bad roads
during the rainy season. As many Cameroonians have told me, I have experienced
and witnessed the worse road conditions this time, and by next time when I come
back to Cameroon, I will be prepared.From holding meetings with farmers, I have a chance to talk to them face
to face and get to know their urgent problems and what’s making them suffer. It
is ridiculous that the government has not invested much on improving the infrastructure in the south west region, although it has the highest
cocoa production. This concerns historic factors and power relation between the
Anglophone and Francophone region in the country. Next time I will write more
about my visits to some cocoa farms around Nguti.
it's 3 PM in the afternoon, I am enjoying my cup of hot cocoa drink, glazing out of my window, I see pouring rainstorm. It's been the whole week like this afternoon, rainstorm and thunderstorm.
Today I made a trip to a former WCS (Wildlife Conservation Society, a conservation organsation based in New York) Research Centre at the fringe of the Banyang Mbo Wildlife Sanctuary (BMWS) within the Nguti Sub division. We started tracking from 8 am in the morning, all along the way was the marshy road you can experience, for uncountable times I just stepped inside the marshy mud so deep that my gumboots got stuck!
We reached the station around 10 am. It's located at the buffer zone that is managed by the community based conservation (CBC), which means the communities can utilize resources in sustainable manner. Here used to be a research camp site for the WCS team for their project of management and conservation work in the wildlife sanctuary. The reserved area is of high ecological value of reptiles, vegetation, and endangered animals like Dwarf crocodiles, elephants, chimpanzee, and the virgin forests. Our guide Mr. M. used to be a research attendance for WCS. "We stationed 1 week in the camp, and other 2 weeks doing field trips". "We used to cook, sleep, and work in this well-constructed wooden house. It's a pity to see everything left abandoned. Nowadays, Illegal hunters and chain-saw operators gather here and shelter. Broken windows, ruined furniture. “Here used to be a beautiful compound, we grow lemon trees, orange trees, surrounded by forest,"
The BMWS was first set up by the government as a reserved forest in the 60s. In the 90s, it's handed over to WCS for management of activities in the sanctuary, like monitoring illegal poaching, field works". But in 2006, WCS decided to withdraw the research project. Nature Cameroon then was founded with the assistance of WCS as torch handover of conservation works at the wildlife sanctuary. Since then, the centre has been abandoned for more then 6 years. In 2013 January, WWF will take over the management and hopefully they will renovate the Centre again.
On the way we tracked back along the Mbie-Ntale-Mamfe Road to Nguti, we met some farmers carried bags of cocoa beans struggling with the bad road with their vehicles and motorcycles. Mr. M told me that he pays Ocada (local name for motorcycle)1000 franc CFA for a 50kg weight of wet cocoa beans. Imagine many farmers who have farms way far from the town, they may prefer sleep in the bush and work for 3-4 days than travel back and forth everyday. Historically, the anglophone regions of NW and SW Cameroon were under the rule of the British and of minorities, not like the French ruled francophone regions, where the government allocates more capital and resources for development. The two Anglophone regions only reunited with the Republic of Cameroon in the 70s. Maybe because of the historical background, people from the SW region are more opened to challenges, inflow of different cultures and welcoming. "Although we have all the resources, oil, rich soil, the forests, it's sad that there are no supports like technical development (machines), people simply are not aware of the economic value of all these resources!"
Only the beginning of our adventure! see how farmers transport the cocoa beans to town
A wooden bridge built with timber
Doremouse, a rare specie of rat we found ! Surprise :)
It's sad to see all infrastructure are abandoned, can resources be used in a better way?
We tracked back from
noon, and on the way we saw trees with high medical value
"Celesediscust", the locals use the tree bark to make tea
to heal malaria, typhoid and fever.
Farmer transport the fermented coco beans back to
town by motor cycles (locally called Ocada)
Let me tell more about my volunteer work here with the organisation. I had joined the ASA- programme in Germany website: asa-programm.de and it's a programme supported by Engaement-Global - a non-profit making company in Germany, and they promote global learning of youth in Europe, mostly in Germany. There are different programmes under the ASA programme, and I joined the "Basic Programme". In April and June 2012 I have already been to 2 preparation seminar in Germany and met other volunteers for the Africa group. During our 3 months internship volunteering experience in an African country ( I chose Cameroon), we develop a project with a partner organisation (like Nature Cameroon) on different topics and issues in group of 2 partners, and my project is about making a strategic plan for the next 5 years, a frame work for applying funding to sustain different projects like solar oven bakery programme in Nguti, water projects/ socio-economic surveys in villages around the Nguti sub division, or biodiversity/ wildlife inventory surveys or research focus in the Banyang Mbo Wildlife Saunctury in South West Region of Cameroon.
Snapped at NC office in Buea Sara, admin officer of the organisation
Marli was helping out with cocoa farm works!
Me, pounding water fufu at a oil palm farm.
During our stay here in Nguti, a peaceful town surrounded by protected forests and agriculture lands, we are introduced to many parties and people, like the Nguti Council, the Mayor, the Sub Division Officer (DO), churches, the Hospital (where I am lodging at their Brother's Guest House), and the agriculture delegate... The most exciting thing is that I've got to visit and work in FARMS every week! To cocoa farms ("kaka" in local dialect), oil palm farms ("banga farm"), cassava farms, coco-yam farms....ect. Last week I was in a banga farm in Banangtii visiting how do people extract palm cooking oil from palm nuts, from harvesting the palm nuts bunch in trees to the final product - cooking oil (locally called"red oil"/banga oil/ chop oil"). The other days I've been to cocoa farms to help cracking cocoa pods and remove seeds for fermentation, drying and selling. Next week, we will go to different villages to meet with farmer's cooperatives and learn about their concerns and problems. Then field trips to different farms, oil palm nurseries, plantations of cocoa and oil palm, a local saw mill that has waste wood management problems. We also have chances to attend different meetings or conferences like the PASC meeting/ council meetings to enrich our experience in Cameroon, get to know more about hot environmental issues and how common interest groups (CIGs, Cameroonians love abbreviations!) work together to struggle to survive. By mid of October, I will also attend a cocoa research conference in Yaounde.
Although it's a pity that Marli (my partner) has gone back to Germany because of sickness, we try to sort things out and i'm glad that many people in Nguti are very supportive! And I know that Marli will be working on her part as well. My stay is rather short, but I've learnt so much that out of my expectation. The ASA programme focuses not only on our projects, but how we see the culture differences and try to bring along what we see here back home and share to those in the Global North who knows less about Africa.
More about the organization Nature Cameroon (donwload a brochure):
Today we held our first meeting with the
local communities of Nguti! We are so excited to get prepared: Marli and I
presented our ASA-program and tried to explain with pictures ad flipcharts. We
want to let the locals know who are we and what do we do during our 2.5 months
stay in Nguti. The Mayor, DO (sub division officer) and agricultural delegate
of the Nguti Sub-division all attended the meeting. We thought there might only
be 10-20 people attend because of our short notice. Surprisingly, more than 30
participants were there and they are very interested in NC’s research project
of The Banyang-Mbo Wildlife Sanctuary, which is the focus area of our research.
I was surprised that many people raised questions in the Q&A session and
they concern about hot issues like how to sustain subsistence agriculture, the
Nguti Saw Mill waste wood management problems and bush meat market/hunting poaching
problems. Next blog I will write more about the sawmill problems.
1:00 – 1:05 p.m
Opening
Prayer
1:05 – 1:10 p.m
Welcoming
speech and introduction of Nature Cameroon team
This
PASC conference was the first time to be presented in English in the South West
Region of Cameroon. SW region was chosen by the EU among the 3 out of 10
regions in the country to launch PASC. The
aim of the conference is to elaborate and clarify the Work Program 1 of PASC
(Civil Society Strengthening Programme in English). PASC is a program under the
cooperation between Cameroon and the European Union (EU). The
funding supports Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) and Community Based Organizations
(CBOs) by strengthening the State Civil Society
Partnership in Cameroon.
As an ASA student volunteer
for my partner organization Nature Cameroon, I am
glad that I was invited to the conference, since I get to know more about the
complementary
role and potential contribution of civil society in Cameroon in the development
process.It
provides representatives from different CSOs or CBOs in the SW region a platform
to gain insight about PASC and to learn from each other and from the invited
experts of the field. This event provides invaluable network opportunities and information
sharing among people from different professions. I especially impressed by critical
questions during the Q & A session, and everyone has an equal opportunity
to raise questions, and each question is answered and taken care of. Although I
am only a visitor of the conference and my stay in Cameroon is short, I hope I
could assist my partner organization to realize the preparation work for
funding application and seek for more other funding opportunities to sustain
existing and future projects.