|
||||
|
3 MARCH 1999: The presidents of Botswana and South Africa today approved the signing of a bilateral agreement to manage their adjacent national parks -- the Gemsbok National Park in Botswana and the Kalahari Gemsbok National Park in South Africa -- as a single ecological unit to be formally known as the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park. The agreement protocol was endorsed by the National Assembly and the National Council of Provinces this month, as required by South Africa's Constitution. The new park will be formally opened by the presidents of the two countries in February 2000. Following the agreement, a joint management structure for the overall management of the park will be established. A one-stop border post to facilitate access to the park will be build at Twee Rivieren. The Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park has been in de facto existence for more than half a century as both countries tried to manage this extensive area in the southern Kalahari in as harmonised and integrated a way as possible. The agreement now formalises previous arrangements to ensure that no barrier to wildlife movement exists along the international boundary that separates the 9 591 km2 Kalahari Gemsbok National Park and the 28 400 km2 Gemsbok National Park. Since June 1992 a joint management committee comprising representatives from the conservation authorities of South Africa (South African National Parks) and Botswana (Department of Wildlife and National Parks) has been working to formalise the de facto agreement and establish the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park. This is the first formally declared transfrontier park in Africa and will hopefully be a model for conservation in the 21st century. (Worldwide 136 such transfrontier conservation areas have been identified, involving 98 different countries, or almost half the world's 224 countries and dependent territories.) By establishing the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, Botswana and South Africa stand of benefit through:
Plans to formalise the joint development and management of the two contiguous parks were proposed in 1989, following a fact-finding study on tourism developments in southern Africa. The study was commissioned by the permanent secretary of the Ministry of Commerce and Industry of Botswana, and, as a result, in May 1991 the Department of Wildlife and National Parks of Botswana received a mandate to consult further on the matter with South African National Parks. Initial meetings between the two conservation agencies led to the establishment of a joint transfrontier management committee (TMC). The TMC has been responsible for the coordination of the management of the two parks, and has worked towards the formal establishment of a transfrontier park. A management plan for the area has been drafted by the TMC, and the policies and actions necessary to maintain the cohesiveness and unity of the park have been agreed. It provides the policies for joint management of the area as a single ecological unit and the basis for the promotion of tourism. This plan is now being implemented and will be regularly revised and updated. Tourists will be able to move freely within the park, and the TMC has produced a unified set of regulations to govern visitor behaviour throughout the park. The two parks will operate autonomously in the running of their own internal affairs and in the development of their own tourist facilities, as agreed in the management plan. Both countries recognise the sovereign equality and territorial integrity of the other. It has been agreed that entrance fees to the park will be pooled and shared equally by both countries, but other revenue (from accommodation, camping, etc.) will be retained by the country that generates it. The overall objectives of the management plan of the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park are as follows:
The Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park Foundation The agreement makes provision for the establishment of the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park Foundation (KTPF). The KTPF is to be incorporated under section 21 of the South African Companies Act, 1973 (Act 61 of 1993). The KTPF will provide the representatives of Botswana and South Africa with the opportunity to share ideas, develop proposals, provide general guidance with respect to activities undertaken in the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, and take steps that are in accordance with the agreement to facilitate the integration and joint management of the parks. The objectives of the KTPF are to promote conservation and to develop the potential of the park as a tourist destination. To implement its objectives, the KTPF will:
Issued by the Ministry of Environmental Affairs and Tourism |
||||
|
For
more information contact: J.J. Tabane (Head of Ministry) |