UK pronounces support for restoration of Mau Forest

In Summary

• The announcement comes at a time when the complex is facing tremendous human-induced pressures and destruction.

• The MCF is home to 22 forest blocks with 12 feeding into major water lakes in Kenya and parts of Western Kenya.

Mau Forest. A man carries seedling for planting at the Kaptunga station of the Mau Forest complex
Mau Forest. A man carries seedling for planting at the Kaptunga station of the Mau Forest complex
Image: FILE

Kenya has said the British government supports its ongoing evictions in the Mau Forest to save the water tower.

A statement sent to newsrooms by State House spokesperson Kanze Dena on Wednesday indicated that the announcement of UK supporting the plan was conveyed by President Uhuru Kenyatta in a letter from Queen Elizabeth.

"The campaign to raise global awareness on the need to conserve Kenya's water towers has received an enormous boost after the Mau Forest Complex (MFC) was admitted to the Queen's Commonwealth Canopy (QCC)," read part of Kanze's statement.

According to State House, the  QCC project was launched in 2015 during the 24th Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Malta.

An appeal was made to all 53 Commonwealth nations to contribute areas of indigenous forest to be preserved in infinity to mark Her Majesty the Queen's lifetime of service to the Commonwealth.

"Since then, around 35 Commonwealth countries have dedicated forestry projects or are planting new forests, with another 10 countries in the process of finalising their submissions," Kanze said.

The announcement comes at a time when the complex is facing tremendous human-induced pressures and destruction.

This, State House indicates, has contributed to related environmental disasters, loss of livelihoods, drought, water crisis, food shortage, reduced river flows, poor land productivity among others.

"The Maasai Mau Forest block (water tower) is the most threatened and degraded of the 22 forest blocks," the statement noted.

Kanze said by offering the MFC to be supported under the QCC, Kenya hopes to accelerate the revival of the most extensive ecosystem and the most critical water tower in Kenya covering approximately 455,000 hectares of land.

The MCF is home to 22 forest blocks with 12 feeding into major water lakes in Kenya and parts of Western Kenya.

"Mau’s admission to the QCC will heighten efforts to protect, restore and rehabilitate some of its degraded areas while improving the general status of the water towers as well as creating and promoting alternative livelihood options to the surrounding communities," she said.

She added, "The admission also presents an active link to the climate action agenda, falling between the Climate Action Summit 2019 and the Climate Change Conference (COP 26) to be held in Glasgow, Scotland, from 9 to 19 November 2020 under the presidency of the UK government".

Kanze said the pronouncement was welcomed by Environment Cabinet Secretary Keriako Tobiko who said the admission of MMF to the QCC is a clear confirmation by Her Majesty The Queen of Mau's importance as a vital ecological and biodiversity asset, not just for Kenya and the Region , but for the whole World.

"The survival of the iconic Maasai Mara National Game Reserve as well as the entire Mara-Serengeti Ecosystem depends on the restoration & protection MMF," Tobiko said.

The first country to offer a QCC dedication was Singapore which dedicated six hectares of rainforest in the Singapore Botanic Gardens and 163 hectares of Singapore’s Bukit Timah Nature Reserve forest in 2016.

The UK government, through the National Forest Company, is committed to supporting the Queen's Commonwealth Canopy and plays a leading road role as an international exemplar for the QCC.

In a new strategic framework agreed on Monday, the Kenya and UK governments made climate change of the pillars.

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