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THE WILD, WILD WORLD OF UGANDA Tell us a little about yourself ing active community participation in eco-friendly activities that will and instinct safaris. I Am Rabani Turysingura a Ugan- dan by birth, in the small village of Nombe. I currently consider myself very lucky to have attained the high- est academic qualification in the whole family. Farming was once the only activity to support the family in providing food locally grown and directly harvested from the family gardens. We were closer to the wildlife con- servation area of course I can’t fail to mention that my brothers and sisters spent most of their time in the fields scaring wild animals away from the garden as they do cross the forest boundary to raid our crops in the village. Hunting was rampant in the region as a sport and for fun, our family conservation mission was inherit- ed from my parents, they encour- aged us to only scare the animals away not to kill them. This involved things like lighting fires around the garden, making noise, drumming the trees etc. This was fun for us and it’s unfortunate that they don’t exist currently. These practices were replaced with ranger wildlife patrolling activities. I was able to proceed on with my studies and my brothers and sisters would cultivate the crops to get food for the family while selling the rest to pay for school tuition. After graduating as a primary teacher in 2006, I taught for two years before going for further stud- ies in environmental management. After my courses ended I concen- trated on the need for responsible eco-tourism in my home region, this was because Mountain gorilla tourism had already begun in the region . be tapped into the ongoing busi- ness to generate individual profits for house hold income. I was the programmes administrator with a local community based organisa- tion known as Nkuringo cultural Centre, the more I was exposed to this community and other stake holders in tourism, the more I was shocked to learn how the tourism trade was being conducted. It was concluded that tourism only as a form of business is quite dangerous to community values and wildlife conservation, a strong reason why we advocated for active, responsi- ble and informed eco-tourism. To- gether with local members in my team and two German volunteers under GIZ we moved from house to house, lodge to lodge talking to hoteliers and other stake holders in the tourism fraternity about our re- sponsible eco-tourism campaign. It was unfortunate that more than 80% of the stake holders were una- ble to consider our points to make sense and didn’t respond with pos- itive remedies as aimed for the sake of the community and wildlife. After one year of working together promoting walking eco-safaris in the Virunga massif between Mga- hinga gorilla national park and Bwindi impenetrable forest, we re- solved to have our ideas effectively extended for other regions to ben- efit and be communicated to the rest members on the global scale. This was done through launching our website online in 2011 and ex- tending our daily guided eco-tours itinerary to Rwanda and D.R.Congo through the current Instinct safaris platform. In 2010 I headed a campaign to re- store the lost shades of the Virunga massif through afforestation of the indigenous trees while encourag- | Page 27 Page 28 |