Zambia saves lions by making baskets from snares
Document Type:
Media
Citation:
Dawson, S. (2002, November 7). Zambia saves lions by making baskets from snares. Reuters. [Online]. Available: http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/18454/newsDate/5-Nov-2002/story.htm [2002, November 7].
Year Published:
2002
Type Work:
News Release
Availability:
Online
Language:
English
Country:
Zambia
Url:
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/18454/newsDate/5-Nov-2002/story.htm
Bushmeat Asian Type:
Bushmeat
Keywords:
Zambia; lions; snares; poachers; funding; tourism
Abstract:
Under a mango tree, three men squatted in the dust with pliers, twisting thick wire from poachers' snares into decorative baskets. Trimmed in gold, red, and blue, they sell them to tourists for $6 each.
"We help save the animals and people find another way to make money," said Kelvin Phiri, a craftsman and founder of Mango Tree Crafts, a cooperative formed four months ago in this eastern Zambian valley.
The Luangwa River Valley of eastern Zambia is so untouched that local residents call it the true Africa - a raw wilderness, harsh in the dry season and luxuriant in the rains. Leopard are plentiful and huge herds of buffalo, elephants, and hippopotamuses roam its savannah woodlands, lagoons, and broad, meandering river plains.
But poaching, as in many areas in Africa, has threatened these natural treasures, wiping out the rare black rhinoceros by the early 1980s and cutting the populations of other animals....












