Young Nepali activists protect pangolins - News Online English

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Friday, 4 June 2021

Young Nepali activists protect pangolins

The ‘Scrappy News Reporting’ team from Rampur in Ilam who interviewed local people about pangolins for a video.

Four years ago, teenager Anish Magar saw a pangolin being killed close to his home in Yangshila, in the forested Chure Hills of eastern Nepal. He rushed to the office of KTK-BELT and Namuna Permaculture Learning Grounds (NPLG), demanding that they take action.

But NPLG Chair Kumar Bishwakarma advised the team not to go to the police. Instead, he urged the youngster to actively try to save the rare and elusive animals, the most trafficked mammal in the world. 

“We must raise community consciousness about why it is important to conserve pangolins, and then they will not poach them again,” Bishwakarma told them.

Anish Magar then became the local leader of the save-the-pangolin effort, and the team went from village to village showing videos of Jackie Chan and organising painting workshops developed by One More Generation and Louise Fletcher

Pangolins are shy, nocturnal scaly mammals that look like reptiles. They quietly function as ecosystem engineers, burrowing under the soil, eating termites and other harmful insects. But pangolin scales and meat are prized in Chinese traditional cosmetics, and they are smuggled from Africa and South Asia to China by the tens of thousands.

Yangshila is located in the Chure Hills up to 1,950m elevation. Due to its topographic and climatic variation, it is home to rich biodiversity including over 500 plant species and three of the most endangered mammals, reptiles and trees — pangolins, the golden monitor lizard and rosewood. 

After Yangshila, the youth team got support from KTK-BELT stands for the Koshi Tappu to Kangchenjunga project to set up a ‘vertical university’ for biodiversity protection in the foothills of the world’s third highest mountain in eastern Nepal. Its co-founder Priyanka Bista has supported the initiative to spread the message in the home range of pangolins. Joining Anish Magar as Pangolin Fellows were Ganga Limbu, Shristy Thapa, Sushila Bishwakarma, Nishan Bista and Sabita Bhujel. 

The members went from community to community conducting pangolin classes in local schools, where the most popular item was always the Jackie Chan Kung-fu Pangolin video. The awareness had an immediate impact, it fired the imagination of students, including 13-year-old Khadga Bahadur Magar.

The boy was returning home from school one day when he saw a family of pangolins scurrying towards the Budhikhola River. Worried that they would be poached, he quietly scooped them up and released them at a location where they could not be seen. 

The boy then guarded the pangolin burrow, spending precious time on conservation that could have been spent on earning to augment his family income. 

So, this year on World Pangolin Day on 20 February young Khadga Bahadur Magar received the ‘Young Pangolin Protector Award’ from the chief guest Province 1 Minister of Industry, Tourism, Forest and Environment Jagdish Kusayait. 

Ganga Limbu training youth activists in film-making to spread awareness about pangolins.
Pangolin rescued in Yangshila, Ilam by youth activists.
Shristy Thapa, one of the Pangolin Youth Fellows.

Supported by experts and zoologists, the young group then got in touch with 16 community forest user groups and students in seven community schools. Using their multimedia campaign, they informed locals about the role of pangolins in nature, the condition of their habitat and the reason behind their decreasing numbers, and about poaching laws. 

“If you had done this workshop before, then we would’ve saved more pangolins, but I promise from now on to ensure that in our community forests pangolins will be protected,” Ghanshyam Paudel, Chairperson of Ekata Community Forest User Group told the young activists.

This year, the group provided grants and awards to the community forests that had helped spread awareness about pangolin protection. The activity did not just help in conservation, but its young members also learnt basic photography and filmmaking techniques. Called ‘Scrappy News Reporting’, they interviewed local people and edited the videos on indigenous knowledge about nature conservation in Ilam’s Kerabari.

The role of biodiversity conservation is seen as the job for experts, PhD holders, or foreign consultants. Ilam’s pangolin conservation initiative has shown that young local activists can be more persuasive in spreading the conservation message. 

from Nepali Times https://ift.tt/2S9dtuv
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