African Wildlife Foundation (AWF) and the Embassy of the Republic of Rwanda co-hosted a special preview event and reception last night for the upcoming IUCN African Protected Areas Congress. APAC presentations on Tuesday, April 5, 2022, attended by US lawmakers, officials from State Department, US AID, US Fish and Wildlife Service, World Bank, and 14 embassies of African countries, to examine what’s at stake at the upcoming IUCN African Protected Areas Congress, scheduled to take place in Kigali, Rwanda on July 18-23, 2022.
Presenters at the AWF-Rwandan Government event, included: Professor Mathilde Mukantabana, Ambassador of Rwanda to the United States; Hilda Suka-Mafudze, African Union Ambassador to the United States of America; AWF Country Director, Rwanda, Belise Kariza; and AWF Global Leadership Director Edwin Tambara, who shared information about the goals of the first-ever IUCN Africa Protected Areas Congress (APAC), and showcased the Conservation and Development Masterplan for Rwanda’s Volcanoes Landscape and expansion of Volcanoes National Park, as an example of the successful community conservation programs to be considered and expanded in numerous African countries by APAC this summer.
Her Excellence, Professor Mathilde Mukantabana, Ambassador of Rwanda to the United States, said: “The Embassy of the Republic of Rwanda is honoured co-host this important African Protected Areas Congress preview event in Washington, D.C. with our trusted partners at African Wildlife Foundation. Detailed presentations on APAC this evening conveyed the goals of APAC policy makers, agencies and NGOs, including the objectives of the inaugural Congress, set to take place in Kigali on 18-23 July, but also helped to inform the successful ongoing conservation work and expansion efforts in Volcanoes National Park in Rwanda.”
AWF Rwanda Country Director Belise Kariza, said: “As the centerpiece of my visit to Washington, D.C., this is such an important event. Many US officials in the audience have heard about the APAC Congress coming up in July in Kigali.
They want to find out more, and some want to attend in-person. As part of our joint presentation with the Embassy of Rwanda, I talked about Rwanda’s conservation and Development Master Plan as an example of how we protect wildlife and wild lands the right way in African countries – how we create a road map for sustainable development and new economic growth through enterprise approaches that respect and restore nature and convey skills and innovation in people. Rwanda’s efforts with AWF in Volcanoes National Park in protected areas where mountain gorillas have experienced a significant rebound will help to inform an investment blueprint for the next generation of enterprises in this landscape and others across Africa a diversity of sectors…forestry, agriculture, creative, tourism and technology.”
AWF Global Leadership Senior Director Edwin Tambara, said: “This evening, we came together with the Embassy of the Republic of Rwanda at a critical juncture to shine a light on African conservation priorities, and to engage US lawmakers on the ambitious agenda of the African Protected Areas Congress (APAC), where African governments, African Protected Areas Directors (APAD), NGOs, business leaders, and conservation experts will respond together to what many are calling the ‘triple crisis of climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution.’”
In the spotlight, AWF experts discussed the new sustainable financing mechanism proposal for all of Africa’s protected and conserved areas including state, private and community areas in terrestrial and marine environments of North, South, East and West Africa. At APAC in July, African Protected Area Directors from all 54 African countries will deliberate the A-PACT – a Conservation Trust Fund with sufficient endowment (US$ 95-225 billion) to pay out $2.63-6.7 billion annually.