From: "Le Fournis, Isabelle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
To: "Le Fournis, Isabelle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2007 7:42:43 PM 
Subject: Director-General urges systematic measures to end poaching 
and killing of endangered animals in DRC endangered animals in DRC 
World Heritage Sites 


UNESCO Press Release No.2007-43 

Director-General urges systematic measures to end poaching and 
killing of endangered animals in DRC World Heritage Sites 

Paris , 25 April - The Director-General of UNESCO, Koïchiro Matsuura, 
has written to Joseph Kabila, President of the Democratic Republic of 
the Congo (DRC), and to Jean-Marie Guehenno, the United Nations Under-
Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, asking for measures to 
stop the poaching and killing of endangered animals in the five World 
Heritage Sites of the DRC. 

The Director-General's initiative follows reports that several 
hundred hippopotami and at least two mountain gorillas have been 
killed in recent months in the Virunga National Park, inscribed on 
the World Heritage List in 1979 and on the World Heritage List in 
Danger in 1994. DRC's four other World Heritage sites - the nationals 
parks of Garamba, Kahuzi-Giega, Salonga and the Okapi Wildlife 
Reserve - are all inscribed on the Danger List. 

While recognizing the quality of the conservation work carried out by 
the Congolese Institute for Nature Conservation, Mr Matsuura notes 
that urgent and systematic action is required to prevent the 
irredeemable loss of the outstanding universal value that warranted 
the inscription of DRC's five sites on the World Heritage List. 

In his letters, the Director-General requests that the mandate of the 
UN Organization Mission in DRC (MONUC) be extended to include the 
protection of DRC's World Heritage sites and other protected areas. 
DRC's World Heritage sites are of exceptional importance to the 
preservation of biodiversity as they are home to some of the world's 
rarest and most remarkable species, including the bonobo, the closest 
living relative of the human species, mountain gorillas and okapi, a 
rare forest giraffe. 

Mr Matsuura notes that the presence of armed groups on these sites, 
including Mai Mai and Rwandan rebels, presents a threat to the parks 
which rangers of the Congolese Wildlife Authority are unable to 
contain. In fact, rangers and their families have been targeted by 
militias, resulting in loss of property, injuries and even death. 

Mr Matsuura notes that "the recent organization of the first free 
elections with the support of MONUC has been a landmark event in the 
struggle to bring back peace and security to the country. As peace 
and stability are also a necessary condition to allow for the 
rehabilitation of the World Heritage sites, we are hopeful that 
significant progress towards this goal can be achieved in coming 
months." 

**** 
For more information: http://www.unesco.org/mab/grasp/home.shtml and 
http://whc.unesco.org/en/statesparties/cd 

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