Prosper
Uganda Safari challenges reports over gorilla rights
Posted Tuesday, August 24 2010 at 00:00
The Director of Uganda Safari, Ms Pamela Kertland Wright, has defended her company’s exclusive monopoly over the gorilla sites in western Uganda, saying it was part of the condition for their $2 million (about Shs4 billion) investment. Ms Kertland told the probe committee instituted by the Minister of Trade, Tourism and Industry, Maj. Gen. Kahinda Otafiire, last week that Uganda Wildlife Authority and the Nkuringo community in Kisoro District, among others, entered a deal that allowed Uganda Safari - a company she runs with her husband - to have rights over the six sites that other tour operators say is the heartland of most gorillas in western Uganda.
“We are not monopolising anything. We have an agreement signed between UWA and the community and that is what has enticed us to invest otherwise it would have been foolish to invest without guarantee,” Ms Kertland said. She told the committee that the accusation of monopoly should not arise because there are now more 16 operational gorilla sites, adding that their massive investment is no ordinary feat, considering that they are in areas that lack even basic necessities like power and water.
In a separate interview, she said she will seek legal redress if the six permits are taken away from them and subjected to competition, arguing that they got the permits in a legal and transparent process. Uganda Safari will have priority over the six sites for 15 years. Ms Kertland said in the last two years, the affected communities have been given $60,000 as part of her company’s contribution to them. He said health centres are being erected and more money is being channelled back to the community more than ever before. After months of investigations, following complaints by some local tour operators, acting Inspector General of Government Raphael Baku on April 28, wrote to State Minister for Tourism Serapio Rukundo ordering the cancellation of the lucrative gorilla-tracking deal on the fringes of Bwindi Impenetrable National Park.
Mr Baku, in the report addressed to Mr Rukundo, said Mr James Bakeine, a tour operator, complained to his office of “discrimination, irregularities and illegalities” in the management and issuance of gorilla-tracking permits by UWA to just a few companies, resulting in monopoly. In addition to the monopoly that the IGG documented in his report, he also directed that the Nkuringo Foundation be wound up because it does not serve the interests of the Nkuringo community. Mr Baku, in an April 28 report, said UWA, by granting The Uganda Safari Company (TUSC) exclusive rights to issue permits to tourists, deprives Kisoro District residents opportunities and revenue. Three top UWA managers, led by acting Executive Director Eunice Duli, in an interview with this newspaper on Tuesday, said the Ombudsman’s report lacks merit and is “inaccurate and misleading.”




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