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Garamba is one of Africa’s oldest national parks, designated in 1938, and was declared a World Heritage site in 1980. Spanning 5,133 km2 and adjacent to the domaines de chasse which cover 9,663 km2, the park is both vast and an intact wild landscape. But this critically important landscape has had a tragic past. Once home to 22,000 elephants as recently as the 1970’s, as well as to the Northern white rhino, militarised poachers reduced the elephant population to fewer than 1,300 individuals, and the last white rhino was seen in the park in the early 2000’s.
Garamba is situated in one of the most hostile parts of Africa as it shares 261 km of its border with war-torn South Sudan. Militant ivory and bushmeat poachers, including the Lord's Resistance Army, have systematically targeted the parks' natural resources over the last few decades to fund their campaigns of terror and instability.
In order to prevent Garamba’s complete destruction, African Parks assumed management in 2005 in partnership with the Institut Congolais pour la Conservation de la Nature (ICCN). The park represents one of African Parks’ greatest challenges, but through the complete overhaul of our law enforcement strategy in 2016 with critical support from the EU, the Wildcat Foundation, the World Bank and USAID, and with improved ranger training and the integration of new technology, we are finally gaining ground. For the first time in years, elephant poaching decreased by 50% in 2017; surveys are showing a significant reduction of illegal activity in the park and key wildlife populations including giraffe and hartebeest have either stabilised or are increasing.
In a region with little economic opportunity, Garamba employs almost 500 full-time local staff with 2,000 more on short-term contracts. Our growing ranger force provides security not only to wildlife but also to tens of thousands of people living around the park, slowly returning peace to this corner of the world again.
Haut-Uele, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Democratic Republic of the Congo
5 200 km²
Although the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has Africa's largest freshwater resources, it is suffering from an acute drinking water supply crisis. ... Only 46 percent of the population had access to an improved drinking water source in 2012.
Congolese franc, Zairean zaire
February, May
Garamba’s temperature is fairly constant, with a daily average of around 25°C, while evenings can be fairly cool during December and January. Rain Season: Garamba has a long rain season that lasts from May through to November. During this time the grass can be very long (particularly between July and November) which makes game viewing more difficult. Dry Season/Early Rain Season: The Park gets little to no rain between early December and end March. Between February and May, after the annual burning period, the park is covered in short green grass and is thus a more ideal time to visit due to good visibility and increased game activity .
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