Council to reject planned hotels around Amboseli
Written by Solomon Mburu
22-June-2007
The Kajiado County Council has rejected plans to build hotels and lodges near Amboseli National Park, saying it would cause environmental degradation.
Council chairman Tarayia ole Kores said the council would hold back the developments, which it fears could hurt the park’s fragile ecosystem.
“All developers will have to come to us for approval,” said Mr Kores.
Amboseli, which is Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS’s second highest earning park brought in Sh420 million in the last financial year. Only Lake Nakuru earned more, with Sh446 million .
But the council says the park has been threatened by developments mushrooming outside the park boundaries following subdivision of community group ranches that surround the park.
KWS assistant director for the southern region, Wilson Korir, said hotels, lodges and small towns coming up around the 392 square-kilometre park were threatening to cut off wildlife migration corridors.
The Kimana Tikono group ranch, which occupies the area east of Amboseli was a formerly a vast ranch that has been sub-divided into more than 800 pieces of land with title deeds.
He said land owners had sold pieces of their properties to developers who are planning to build hotels and lodges there.
“In the last two years, there has been a mushrooming of tourist facilities in this area,” Mr Korir told Business Daily. “On the two-kilometre stretch from the park’s main gate to the Kimana gate, one lodge has already been built on wildlife migratory route while two others are planned to come up close to it.”
KWS fears that the growth in tourism will attract more developers and threaten wildlife.
As the ranches continue to be split up, small settlements and unplanned townships are beginning to spring around the park and could surround it, he said.
“In 50 years to come, these settlements can lock up the park as is the case with the Nairobi National Park.”
The council chairman said the local authority would halt such “substandard” developments once a plan for Amboseli’s management is officially instituted.
Amboseli in the Maasai language means “place of dust” and hints at the delicate nature of the park ecosystems.
The area is almost arid, but for three swamps fed by springs from Mr Kilimanjaro, which Mr Korir said are a “lifeline of the Ambosli and attract a host of wildlife to the park.”
The wildlife is the biggest attraction for the small park. Amboseli’s 1,500 elephants, are famed as the most studied in the world, each of them named and characterised by researchers.
Other fauna in the park include of wildebeest, buffalos, zebras and a host of other smaller animals.
But Mr Korir said despite their numbers, most animals come to the park only to drink at the swamps in the early morning and evening hours, spending their nights in surrounding ranchland.
The nature of the park’s animal life makes the need for corridors to allow regular movement of the animals in and out.
“Changing land use in the Maasai-owned group ranches that surround the park are now posing a great risk which experts fear may disrupt the areas’ ecosystem and the movement of wildlife,” the KWS official said, adding that some land was already being sold for agricultural use. To help mitigate the looming disaster, KWS has been helping area communities start their own wildlife conservancies, and earn money from hosting tourists.
One of them, the Kimana Tikono Group Ranch has set aside 10,000 hectares where KWS has helped create a conservancy.
The community collects gate fees from tourists entering the conservancy. And African Safari club, which operates a lodge within the park, pays the group bed night charges plus a monthly rent of Sh300,000.
This programme is hoped will help to maintain the vast rangelands that surround the Amboseli and thus protect its survival.