From the BBC:
“Sierra Leone's chimpanzees:
The newly weds who set up a sanctuary”
Celia was rescued with burn
wounds from local hunters in Sierra Leone. She is being fed milk by a care
staff. Bala Amarasekaran and his wife, Sharmila, spotted the baby chimpanzee
tied to a tree in a village in a rural part of Sierra Leone. He was for sale. The
couple bought the animal and pledged to care for him. Little did they know that
this chance encounter would change their lives. Three decades later, they run a
sanctuary devoted to saving the critically endangered subspecies known as the
Western chimpanzee. "We didn't understand what we were getting into,"
Mr Amarasekaran says. "We were newly married and we had this affection
seeing this baby chimp and we thought: 'OK, we'd bring him home and nurse him.'
That's all we thought about. "But once he came into our lives, I think we
got attached. "We rescued another one and another until we had seven or
eight chimps in our house and that is what drove us," he adds. The
Tacugama Chimpanzee Sanctuary the couple set up is now home to about 100
Western chimpanzees. It sits in a patch of pristine rainforest on the outskirts
of the capital, Freetown.
These primates mostly live in the
forests of Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia. They are also found in Ivory
Coast, Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Mali and Senegal. Western chimpanzees have been
found to use tools unknown in other chimpanzee populations, a 2016 paper in the
American Journal of Primatology said. These include cracking nuts, hunting bush
babies with spears and throwing stones. But they are under threat. The
population is estimated to have declined by 80% between 1990 and 2014, to about
52,800.They mostly live in the wild. Only 17% of Western chimpanzees are to be
found in protected areas.
As urbanisation and development eat into their
forest habitat, Western chimpanzees have been put "on a trajectory towards
extinction unless drastic measures are taken" to protect them, according
to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). In 2016, the
organisation moved their status on its Red List of threatened species from
being endangered critically endangered, reflecting their increasingly dire
situation.
In 2019, Sierra Leone became the
first country in the world to declare the primate a national animal, in a bid
to reverse this trend. "Sierra Leone has a significant population. Between
Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia, we probably have 70% or 75% of these Western
chimpanzees and if we do not address this issue, as three nations, we will
watch them disappear right before our eyes," Mr Amarasekaran warns.
The conservationist, who gave up
his 15-year career as an accountant and has dedicated his life to the chimps,
sees it as a sense of obligation. "For every rescue, we try to do our best
to make their lives different, because they have suffered at the hands of
humans," he says. Mr Amarasekaran feels he has a special connection with
every chimp at the sanctuary and adds: "They still have that lifelong
relationship with me and I think that will last forever." The chimpanzees
are also attached to the people who take care of them every day. Among the
chimpanzees at the sanctuary is Celia, a six-month-old orphaned baby. When she
arrived at the sanctuary she could not sit or walk.
Celia was rescued from the hands
of poachers after having been burnt when people set fire to some land in order
to clear it. Posseh Kamara - also known as Mama P - is responsible for looking
after her, including bottle-feeding her. "I feel good every day when I
wake up because I have to work with my baby chimps. I grew to have a love for
the job and for the baby chimps," Mrs Kamara says.
Most of the rescued chimpanzees
arrive malnourished and abandoned, often traumatised after being separated from
their group. They are then cared for and rehabilitated at Tacugama. Mrs Kamara,
who has grandchildren of her own, says it breaks her heart to see what the baby
chimpanzees have to go through. She adds that she is proud of the progress she
has made with Celia. As the chimpanzees grow older, they are brought together
with others and use an enclosure where they learn skills before being released
to join the 100 others that now call this sanctuary their home.
Tourists and local people,
including children, spend time at the sanctuary to learn about the chimpanzees
and wildlife in general. Mr Amarasekaran says educating people about the risks
facing the Western chimpanzees is essential, and the sanctuary is working with
communities across Sierra Leone. It has a growing international profile but for
the founder it is most important to get the message across to people at home "Sometimes
you get [more] recognition from afar than from within," he says.
^ This is such an interesting
story and a great cause (and the chimpanzees are so cute. ^
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