Sunday, 29 April 2018

GOLDEN MONKEY EXPEDITION


When God created the earth, He saw it was good. But it must have taken God a special moment to create the Golden Monkey. These beautiful creatures habitat is the Virunga National Park, Kahuzi-Biega (DRC), Volcanoes National Park and Mgahinga National Park (Uganda).


 When God created the earth, He saw it was good. But it must have taken God a special moment to create the Golden Monkey. These beautiful creatures habitat is the Virunga National Park, Kahuzi-Biega (DRC), Volcanoes National Park and Mgahinga National Park (Uganda).

 Though little known compared to their cousins, the mountain gorillas, seeing the central Africa golden monkey also is going to live you with unforgettable experience of exploring nature. Virunga Community Programs will take you right into their habitat for a day with nature’s beauty.

KNOW MOUNTAIN GORILLAS




The mountain gorillas have a very funny eating habit. They consume over 200 species of plants, and a gorilla eats 15% of its weight. A big silverback, weighing over 200 kilos, will eat 30 kilos of plant where 17 liters of water remains in its body


 They rarely drink water because of this phenomenon. The critically endangered herbivores lead peaceful social life in their habitat, and rarely attack humans. You can make a visit to these amazing creatures via Virunga Community Programs and see nature developing at its best.

www.virungaprograms.com 

GO GREEN WITH VIRUNGA PROGRAMS CONSERVATION IS THE KEY




Rwanda, the Land of a Thousand Hills tucked in the heart of Africa has an amazing and breathtaking landscape.  Its idyllic scenery has for many years wowed visitors. A Rwanda proverb that God travels everywhere but lives in Rwanda aptly describes this paradise on earth. Through Virunga Community Programs, you have the chance to see nature at its pristine.

Saturday, 21 April 2018

DISTRIBUTION OF BOOKS


Virunga Community Programs, through Virunga Charity Village is deeply involved in education of children in Goma and Bukavu. Children are our future and their education guarantees that they have a great life in future. Our education programs seek to help vulnerable children, some of who spend their lives in the streets without families. You can be part of this noble initiative by donating to the upkeep of these children and ensuring their future through education.
Fore more info 
visit  us on : www.virungaprograms.com



Saturday, 14 April 2018

LET US SAVE RANGERS

                         Published By VCP
On Monday 9 April 2018, the Democratic of Congo (DRC) was shocked when a group of five rangers together with their driver were killed in an ambush in the Virunga National Park, the famed haven for the gorillas and other endangered species.According to Joel Malembe, the park’s spokesman when talking to AFP, he said they sadly lost six rangers, adding the team was ambushed while driving between the sectors of Lulimba and Ishasha, near the border with Uganda. A seventh ranger, the team’s leader, was wounded during the attack.
On April 2, a park ranger died in an attack by armed men. He was guarding the site of a hydroelectric plant that is under construction.
The park's director, Emmanuel de Merode, a Belgian national, was himself wounded in a road ambush between the park and Goma, the capital of North Kivu, in May 2014.
All these tragic incidents should raise our own consciousness about the value of human life, while at the same time those of the animals. The rangers ironically died in the line of duty trying to protect wildlife.
These rangers have left their families behind, meeting tragic death at the hands of fellow human beings. Even though not unprecedented, it’s the magnitude of the killing at this age, when everybody should know the value of the wildlife and conservation that rankles. 
Every life is sacrosanct. That the six rangers had to lose their lives when going about their normal duty is unfathomable. And since this is not the first time such heinous crime is happening is inexcusable. We should go into deep introspection as human beings and ask ourselves some intelligent questions: what are we doing as individuals to make sure that such kind of bloodbath is consigned to the annals of history? At this age, how do we still let poachers to roam our valued forests and indiscriminately kill man and wildlife? What can be done to prevent such kind of future occurrences?
Virunga is home to about a quarter of the world's population of critically-endangered mountain gorillas, as well as to eastern lowland gorillas, chimpanzees, okapis, lions, and elephants among others.
One of the most important conservation sites in the world, it covers 7,800 square kilometers (3,011 miles), or three times the size of Luxembourg, along a swathe of eastern DR Congo abutting the border with Uganda and Rwanda.
For many years, the park has been hostage to marauding poachers that has brought a lot of suffering to the same people who have put their lives on the line to protect the wildlife. Virunga Community Programs believe that no life should be lost.
We train rangers and guides that protect our environment, and make sure conservation efforts around the Virunga is realized. Furthermore, knowing that the poachers also need sustainable source of income, we make sure we integrate them in income generating programs so that we have a win-win situation for both human and wildlife.
You too can be part of the solution. Just click our website www.virungaprograms.com and you can know the level of support we do so that you also can help us to completely wipe out this menace that is affecting both human and wildlife.

Monday, 9 April 2018

GORILLA ADVENTURE

Happiness resides in the heart of people. When expressed out it has a cathartic effect.


Trekking the famous Rwanda mountain gorillas has for many years provided visitors this sort happiness. As only people who have done it can attest. They are rare, they are funny and yet when you see them, part of your life’s adventure is achieved in a most profound way. Link with Virunga Community Programs for an adventure of a lifetime trekking these amazing primates.

www.virungaprograms.com


KISIMBA-IKOBO: NEGLECTED NATURE PARADISE


Published By www.virungaprograms.com

Kisimba-Ikobo Nature Reserve is 150 Kilometers from Goma Town, Eastern part of Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). However, despite community wars happening there in this part of the world, it has continued to maintain relative peace, hosting nature at its pristine. It hosts lowland gorillas, chimpanzees, antelopes, okapis, elephants, buffaloes, and many species of monkeys, including the colobus monkey among others.

This is a nature paradise of earth worth visiting. According to Francis Ndagi, coordinator of Virunga Community Programs of Virunga massif, Kisimba-Ikobo hosts nature. “You are going to meet all these animals, happy in their natural habitat. This is where man falls in love with nature,” says Ndagi.
The surface is 1,298,488 square kilometers. It was legally recognized in 2002 by customary chiefs and local leaders as a national reserve, and officially recognized. In August 2008, it was recognized by the government DRC as a natural reserve.
When visitors come to any place, they want to see wild animals and plants in their natural habitats. Naturally, Kisimba-Ikobo Nature Reserve has all it offers to sustain different plant and animal species.
The nature reserve is located in the world’s most tropical forests, in an area rich in biodiversity that supports several endangered species including the gorillas.
In 2009, according to https://gorillafund.org/community-reserves-receive-grant/, the Walt Disney Company, in conjunction with Conservation International, granted $4 million to protect the Tayna Nature Reserve and the Kisimba-Ikobo Reserve in eastern DRC, which are home to endangered Grauer’s gorillas as well as many other important and unique species.
The publication reports that (the) have been granted legal status by the Congolese government equal to its national parks, with management carried out by local communities. They belong to a network of ten such reserves (in a consortium called UGADEC) created from lands donated by traditional leaders who have managed them for generations. The Fossey Fund is the primary partner with these communities, helping them to protect wildlife, support health, education and economic development, and carry out scientific research to direct their conservation efforts, with support from USAID.
According Ndagi, Tourism activities is quite low in the region because poaching is rampant, illegal mineral mining, deforestation; rangers are not being paid (in time) while the forest is so big to support local rangers efforts.
“They don’t have (enough) equipment to monitor the animals and capacity building there is almost zero. Even though it’s showing its face in the world, even simple things like infrastructure is a problem. However, what I have seen (from my foray there) there is women are actively involved in conservation, more than the men,” says Ndagi.
Last year between December 22 and 25 December 2017 poachers killed one lowland and five chimpanzees at station Kishonja in the national reserve.
Ndagi says private sectors like Virunga Community Programs are established to save Kisimba-Ikobo Nature Reserve. “When time comes, we are going to finance community development, community conservation, education, capacity building, management of forests and provide support and advocacy.”.
Kisimba-Ikobo Natural Reserve is a background reserve in DRC that is rich in nature. You can visit this paradise on earth day.


www.virungaprograms.com
Shared publicly