By Jenni Trethowan | Founding Member
In my last report of 2024, I spoke about our court application and that we were going before court on 4 December 2024; I said that I would tell you the outcomes in this report...
It was an emotional roller coaster as we worked under extreme pressure in the past months, but at the end of November counsel for the first respondent approached us to reach settlement and, after some robust debate, on the 6th December 2024 Judge Lekhuleni signed a Court Order recording that the City of Cape Town, SANParks and Cape Nature have accepted responsibility, individually and as the Joint Task Team, to manage baboons and to implement their Baboon Strategic Management Plan.
This is the first time that we have a legal document holding all three authorities accountable, what this means is that mitigation strategies must now be implemented within a reasonable time frame.
It seems so unnecessary that we had to take this hard fought legal route to secure mitigation solutions, many of which had already been identified, researched and agreed upon over the past 20 years; the authorieis should have been working on these goals but as they did not we had no other recourse since the many years of workshops, talking and meetings had achieved nothing.
we are very pleased with this outcome not only for implementation of mitigation strategies but also for the enforcement of by-laws, and regulations which have been neglected for too long; aspects such as prosecuting offenders for non-compliance with waste management by-laws (as just one example) should have been enforced but have not been. We are also insisting that regulations of Law Enforcement and Cape Nature (with specific reference to baboons being shot) will now be investigated and, if possible, prosecuted.
The Court Order is now the most important tool in our toolbox to ensure that baboons are kept safely in natural areas and that communities do not suffer damage caused by baboons when they are in urban areas - the Court Order provides a win-win for baboons and communities alike as we can hold the authorities accountable to doing what they know they have to do.
Having secured the legal case, Baboon Matters is now focussing on our next project to ensure better protection of baboons. For too many years babooons have been regarded as a species of least concern and considered to be "over abundant" and as a result there is little to no protection for these persecuted animals.
This year Baboon Matters will start our project to complete a national population estimation of baboons in South Africa. I suspect we will find that the population is badly fragmented and that there will not be nearly as many baboons as authorities think there are. It is our intention to use the data collected to compel conservation authorities to provide better protection for baboons and possible reclassify their status.
We will be relying heavily on the public as we emabrk on our ambtious project, not only for financial support, but to also participate in our first ever Baboon Bioblitz (date to be confirmed). We will need land owners to identify where their local baboons live and in 2026 we will begin the second phase of the project by investigating reported sightings and then establish a population model.
I hope that you will continue to support our hard efforts so that together we ensure better long term protection of baboons in South Africa.
By Jenni Trethowan | Founding Member
By Jenni Trethowan | Founder member
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