試す 金 - 無料
Living in harmony with the forest
Independent on Saturday
|May 24, 2025
THE Congo Basin's hunter-gatherer people have the secret to living well with the forest. While doing fieldwork in 2020, I remember walking with indigenous elders Ferdinand Mbita and Félix Mangombe up the small, winding path into their forest in Cameroon, jumping over highways of vicious black ants, shadowed by grand trees. We almost always encountered monkeys chattering when venturing down this path. Once we came across the prints of a gorilla.
This path, near the Dja River in the south region of Cameroon, lay next to the small village of Bemba. The village folk, Baka hunter-gatherers, used the path regularly to find forest medicines, work on their farm plots, or to embark on fishing or hunting trips.
When I returned to Cameroon to stay again in the village a year later, the path was unrecognisable. The dense vegetation had been stripped away, trees cut and rivers restricted. The path was now an industrial road, developed by a logging company with permission from the government to chop down trees in a large area behind the village for a year.
Inspecting the damage, Mbita and Mangombe noticed how trees they used for medicine and the places where they'd found honey had been transformed into scarred, muddy earth. We used to see animal tracks here; now the only tracks we could see were those of logging trucks.
"The Baka are dead," Mbita said, taking in what he was seeing.
This story is not unique. At least 40% of Cameroon's forests have been allocated for logging. Add to that concessions also granted to mining companies, sport hunting companies and big agro-industry. They have cut down forests and set up rubber and palm oil plantations. The social and environmental effects have been devastating.
このストーリーは、Independent on Saturday の May 24, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Independent on Saturday からのその他のストーリー
Independent on Saturday
Foot-and-mouth disease threatens food security
SOUTH Africa faces a looming food security crisis as Foot-and-Mouth Disease (FMD) spreads across the country, destroying cattle, disrupting milk and meat production, and costing farmers millions of rand.
1 mins
January 17, 2026
Independent on Saturday
Students 'locked out' of varsities
Thousands of new applicants, too few places
4 mins
January 17, 2026
Independent on Saturday
Nine dead, homes destroyed as floods wreak havoc
NINE people have died, including a 5-year-old child, and close to 2000 homes have been damaged after severe flooding hit Limpopo during relentless rainfall this week.
1 mins
January 17, 2026
Independent on Saturday
SA will turn the tide in 2026 - economists
WHILE there is a silver lining on the horizon for South Africa's economy, dark clouds remain, warned economists on the outlook for 2026.
3 mins
January 10, 2026
Independent on Saturday
Too many cars, too few cops in SA
Add alcohol to the mix, and it's no wonder our roads are so deadly
3 mins
January 10, 2026
Independent on Saturday
Is SA ready to follow the UK’s junk food ad ban?
AT 7PM, a familiar ritual unfolds in living rooms across the world.
1 mins
January 10, 2026
Independent on Saturday
Holiday braais set to burn a hole in your pocket
AS SOUTH Africans take a well-deserved rest and prepare to put their feet up and enjoy the festive season, many will find that the beloved braai is costing more than expected.
1 mins
December 20, 2025
Independent on Saturday
Beach woes as Durban welcomes tourists
Despite four beaches closed due to water quality, experts expect a bumper holiday season
3 mins
December 20, 2025
Independent on Saturday
From K-Pop to a political saviour, psychic predicts a wild new year
MOVE over, Netflix, psychic medium Priscilla Gendron has shared her vision for 2026, and Hollywood might want to take notes.
2 mins
December 20, 2025
Independent on Saturday
Family's dream temple ends in tragic collapse
THE KwaZulu-Natal government has called for a review of building practices in light of climate change after a section of a temple owned by a prominent Durban family collapsed in Verulam yesterday, killing one person and trapping several others beneath the rubble.
2 mins
December 13, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

