SLUG: 2-307270 World Parks Congress (L) DATE: NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=9/8/2003

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=WORLD PARKS CONGRESS

NUMBER=2-307270

BYLINE=DELIA ROBERTSON

DATELINE=JOHANNESBURG

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

INTRO: The World Parks Congress has opened in Durban to outline a 10-year conservation plan. V-O-A's Delia Robertson reports from our bureau in Johannesburg.

TEXT: Some two-thousand, five-hundred delegates from across the world will decide on the so-called Durban Accord and Action Plan -- an agenda for the future of protected areas or parks and their management over the next ten years and beyond.

The delegates will also review 30 separate recommendations on issues as local as the relationship of parks and adjacent communities or as global as climate change.

William Eichbaum of the World Wildlife Fund, or W-W-F, says delegates must develop frameworks for the development and management of parks to ensure that they do not disrupt the lives and livelihood of local communities. Beyond that, Mr. Eichbaum told V-O-A, parks must offer economic advancement to local communities.

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In some situations there are opportunities to return some of the fees that are charged to the public as they enter a park back to local communities so that they can actually improve their well-being and so that they can participate in some of the larger wildlife management activities.

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Delegates will also be considering the impact of climate change on parks and the preservation of biodiversity.

Also on the agenda in Durban is the development of plans to improve the knowledge of little known areas, such as the marine environment, and how to ensure funding for protected areas. (Signed)

NEB/DAR/MAR/MEM/FC