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WCPA North Africa/Middle East Region

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Countries in the Region
Key Issues
Programme
News
Publications
Links
Mr Mohammad S.A.
SULAYEM
WCPA Regional Vice Chair for North Africa/Middle
East
Conservation Planner
National Commission for Wildlife Conservation and
Development
PO Box 1141
Riyadh 11431
Saudi Arabia
Tel: ++ 966 506467787
Fax: ++ 966 1 441 797
Email: msulayem2@yahoo.com
mohammadsulayem@hotmail.com
Countries
in the Region
AFGHANISTAN |
ALGERIA |
BAHRAIN |
| CYPRUS |
EGYPT |
IRAN-ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF |
| IRAQ |
ISRAEL |
JORDAN |
| KUWAIT |
LEBANON |
LIBYAN ARAB JAMAHIRIYA |
| MOROCCO |
OMAN |
QATAR |
| SAUDI ARABIA |
SYRIAN ARAB REPUBLIC |
TUNISIA |
| TURKEY |
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES |
YEMEN-REPUBLIC OF |

Key
issues in North Africa/Middle East
The North Africa and the Middle
East region is characterised by an arid and semi
arid environment. Being at a junction between
three continents it is considered as one of the
most diverse areas on earth. The region includes
the following 22 countries: Afghanistan, Algeria,
Bahrain, Cyprus, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan,
Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Oman, Palestine,
Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, Turkey, UAE
and Yemen.
The region is characterized by
variations in elevation ranging from the lowest
point on earth at the Dead Sea area (more than
300 m below sea level) to high mountains rising
above 3000 m above sea level. The vertical and
the horizontal variation from north to south create
high biological diversity. The marine components
in the region also reflect great diversity, centered
on the Mediterranean Sea, but including the Atlantic
Ocean, the Red Sea, Persian (Arabian) Gulf, the
Arabian Sea, Black Sea, Caspian Sea and the Indian
Ocean. The variation in ecosystems across the
region is reflected by high diversity in flora
and fauna. Endemism is considerably high particularly
among marine invertebrates and in some hot spots
like the Socotra Islands of Yemen.
The region features a unique experience
in land management for conserving natural resources,
which is the hema system. Hema is
an Arabic word, which means an area that is protected.
The concept of hema is demonstrated in
the practice of setting aside and protecting an
area with good vegetation cover. Such an action
was usually taken by a governing authority, a
group of people (a tribe or a clan), or an individual.
Those sites were mostly protected for grazing
during drought seasons and in other instances
for multiple use such as bee- keeping and for
the protection of large trees. Grazing and other
uses, such as cutting grasses for fodder, were
banned most of the time and only allowed with
restrictions and under certain regulations set
by those who established or managed the hema.
The practice of hema dates
back, in the Arabian Peninsula, to the pre-Islamic
era. It probably goes as far back in history as
2000 years ago or maybe more. It developed as
an acknowledgment of the need to conserve and
wisely use scarce renewable resources.
In 1969, it was estimated that
there were more than 3000 hema in Saudi
Arabia. Later, a survey was conducted in 1984
in the mountain areas west of Saudi Arabia (where
most of the hema existed) and only 71 hema were found, under various degrees of protection.
The main aim of the WCPA regional
program is to ensure that protected areas effectively
fulfil their role in conserving biodiversity and
to contribute to sustainable development. Moreover,
the program aims to assist governments of the
region in meeting their obligations regarding
the implementation of the Convention on Biological
Diversity and other related conventions. A WCPA
Regional Action Plan has been completed and will
be considered part of the next IUCN regional programme.

The
North Africa and Middle East Programme
The
objectives of the WCPA Regional Action Plan and
the associated project proposals for North Africa
and the Middle East, are:
- To develop and implement protected
area training programmes in the region targeted
largely at the managers of particular sites;
- To develop more effective and
appropriate protected area legislation at a
national level, which reflect the needs and
unique circumstances of each country and is
capable of implementation;
- To develop a number of pilot
protected areas in the region as well as guidelines
for their more effective establishment and long-term
management; and
- To develop guidelines related
to ecotourism and protected areas in the region.
Training
The lack of skilled staff is a major constraint
to the effective establishment and management
of protected areas in the region. The management
of many protected areas falls below acceptable
international standards. Such disciplines as protected
area planning and management, wildlife management
and environmental sociology are not yet widely
recognised by the region's academic institutions.
One training centre has recently been established
in the region, but there are almost no university
courses or degree programs in the subjects most
closely related to protected area management.
Skills are particularly needed
in the following areas: involvement of local stakeholders;
conflict resolution; planning and management of
protected areas including marine protected areas;
application of information arising from research
and monitoring programmes; and development of
environmental awareness and education programmes.
The development of skills must embrace legal and
socio-economic as well as ecological aspects of
protected area management.
The primary focus of training
must be on those directly involved in the management
of protected areas, such as upper level managers
and administrators, middle level managers, researchers,
rangers, and tourist guides, however, there are
other important target groups. These should include
decision-makers and legislators who work in other
agencies but whose decisions may influence the
establishment and management of protected areas.
They should also include local stakeholders, educators,
women, and youth.
Legislation
The legislative basis for protected areas is still
weak in the region. Even though most countries
have some protected area legislation, others do
not have enough provisions to make creative use
of the region's rich heritage of traditional institutions
and indigenous conservation practices. There are
also few provisions to involve local citizens
as participants in the establishment and management
of protected areas, or to ensure that any benefits
generated from the use of protected areas be equitably
shared with the local people. In many instances,
implementation and enforcement are given insufficient
attention.
Pilot
Protected Areas
There is an acute need to expand the protected
area systems of the region to represent those
biotopes where there is no protection, and to
conserve endangered endemic and relict species
of plants and animals, as well as species of special
ecological, economic, or cultural value. Especially
important is the need to conserve those key sites
of biological productivity - the wetlands, mountains
and woodlands, and the coastal sites - that constitute
the habitats of the majority of the region's flora
and fauna.
Equally great is the need to manage
protected areas or suitable parts of them, in
a manner that brings sustainable and tangible
benefits to the local people who have in many
cases been disadvantaged by their establishment.
Such benefits will give these people incentives
to become partners in conservation.
Broad agreement and commitment
to these objectives exists among conservation
agencies within the region. But there is a need
for highly successful pilot or "model" protected
areas that are effective in conserving the region's
biological diversity and at the same time demonstrating
how community participation in the management
of protected areas can bring tangible sustainable
benefits.
Ecotourism
One of the most promising ways for protected areas
to generate tangible and sustainable benefits
is from nature-based tourism. Ecotourism can provide
a meaningful incentive and economic justification
for conservation, as it depends on the maintenance
of unspoiled nature and thriving communities of
wild plants and animals. In addition, it can generate
an influential and articulate clientele who can
serve as advocates for the conservation of protected
areas. If it is not managed very carefully, however,
nature-based tourism tends to degrade the very
resources upon which it depends, and this has
been happening in the region.
According to the World Tourism
Organization (WTO), one of five major tourism
trends will be an important growth in adventure
tourism and in ecotourism. The same organization
also forecasts solid growth in cultural tourism
and North Africa and the Middle East are among
the regions where this is expected to happen in
the near future.
It is, therefore, critical that
tourism be carefully planned to ensure that such
developments and activities do not compromise
the natural and cultural values for which protected
areas were established in the first place. This
can only be ensured through effective management
of these areas. Emphasis also needs to be placed
on the development of strong partnerships between
protected area agencies and tourism agencies,
including commercial operators.

News
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Protected Areas in Egypt: Moving Forward
26 de diciembre de 2006
Protected Areas in Egypt have been a fundamental management tool for nature conservation during the past 20 years, with an increasingly important role in the social and economic development of the country. |
Full Story IUCN Med Office |
Links

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