Dubai Telegraph - Sacred leaf offers hope for Vanuatu's threatened forests

EUR -
AED 4.236346
AFN 72.672673
ALL 95.906817
AMD 434.287518
ANG 2.064916
AOA 1057.787749
ARS 1578.016278
AUD 1.673946
AWG 2.079239
AZN 1.980774
BAM 1.954725
BBD 2.319714
BDT 141.321056
BGN 1.97174
BHD 0.434855
BIF 3421.11096
BMD 1.153531
BND 1.480096
BOB 7.976613
BRL 6.041061
BSD 1.151712
BTN 108.542894
BWP 15.836869
BYN 3.458718
BYR 22609.200095
BZD 2.316416
CAD 1.598176
CDF 2636.396126
CHF 0.917409
CLF 0.027122
CLP 1070.926189
CNY 7.972569
CNH 7.980588
COP 4255.905071
CRC 533.969312
CUC 1.153531
CUP 30.568561
CVE 110.209168
CZK 24.512183
DJF 205.097428
DKK 7.472317
DOP 69.436998
DZD 153.412615
EGP 60.798334
ERN 17.302959
ETB 177.998708
FJD 2.603982
FKP 0.862651
GBP 0.864865
GEL 3.108745
GGP 0.862651
GHS 12.592402
GIP 0.862651
GMD 84.786536
GNF 10096.747072
GTQ 8.811689
GYD 240.965392
HKD 9.03301
HNL 30.582325
HRK 7.532094
HTG 150.828553
HUF 388.185444
IDR 19540.808653
ILS 3.603742
IMP 0.862651
INR 108.598621
IQD 1508.817907
IRR 1514931.759519
ISK 143.395539
JEP 0.862651
JMD 181.00947
JOD 0.817892
JPY 184.020404
KES 149.554966
KGS 100.875531
KHR 4612.203632
KMF 492.557238
KPW 1038.244227
KRW 1736.657609
KWD 0.354387
KYD 0.959839
KZT 554.846383
LAK 24876.80942
LBP 103137.614957
LKR 362.218818
LRD 211.366586
LSL 19.703468
LTL 3.406076
LVL 0.697759
LYD 7.354605
MAD 10.753686
MDL 20.229647
MGA 4800.089717
MKD 61.61085
MMK 2422.395585
MNT 4134.054978
MOP 9.281074
MRU 45.941548
MUR 53.789168
MVR 17.833699
MWK 1997.08917
MXN 20.659036
MYR 4.626237
MZN 73.721572
NAD 19.703298
NGN 1596.682827
NIO 42.383568
NOK 11.176673
NPR 173.646461
NZD 1.999478
OMR 0.44352
PAB 1.151767
PEN 3.986073
PGK 4.976918
PHP 69.586721
PKR 321.525831
PLN 4.278895
PYG 7539.494182
QAR 4.199945
RON 5.095952
RSD 117.441162
RUB 93.873095
RWF 1681.88028
SAR 4.327996
SBD 9.276664
SCR 15.75814
SDG 693.27198
SEK 10.882875
SGD 1.483065
SHP 0.865447
SLE 28.31934
SLL 24188.972762
SOS 658.198083
SRD 43.328955
STD 23875.754805
STN 24.484837
SVC 10.078108
SYP 128.552763
SZL 19.701129
THB 37.893189
TJS 11.023307
TMT 4.048892
TND 3.389242
TOP 2.777424
TRY 51.287014
TTD 7.817294
TWD 36.884031
TZS 2969.172842
UAH 50.537759
UGX 4284.755038
USD 1.153531
UYU 46.697153
UZS 14029.163058
VES 537.566198
VND 30383.996454
VUV 137.29706
WST 3.171668
XAF 655.559536
XAG 0.016831
XAU 0.00026
XCD 3.117474
XCG 2.075786
XDR 0.815306
XOF 655.565215
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.290042
ZAR 19.711422
ZMK 10383.157839
ZMW 21.624077
ZWL 371.436388
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • BCC

    -0.3600

    74.29

    -0.48%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.07

    -0.25%

  • RYCEF

    -0.8200

    15.24

    -5.38%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    22.75

    +0.31%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    22.82

    -0.39%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    25.47

    -0.08%

  • NGG

    -1.8900

    82.4

    -2.29%

  • RELX

    -0.4000

    32.07

    -1.25%

  • RIO

    -1.7500

    85.79

    -2.04%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    14.63

    -0.62%

  • GSK

    -0.7600

    53.94

    -1.41%

  • AZN

    -3.7400

    183.4

    -2.04%

  • BTI

    -0.1900

    58.26

    -0.33%

  • BP

    0.7600

    46.17

    +1.65%

Sacred leaf offers hope for Vanuatu's threatened forests
Sacred leaf offers hope for Vanuatu's threatened forests / Photo: Chris McCALL - AFP

Sacred leaf offers hope for Vanuatu's threatened forests

The feather-shaped namele leaf is so central to Vanuatu it features on the national flag, and now it is being enlisted to protect some of the country's most important forests.

Text size:

By invoking a traditional taboo against touching the sacred leaf, conservationists and locals hope to keep loggers away from places like Vatthe Conservation Area -- a candidate for UNESCO World Heritage status.

Located on Vanuatu's largest island Espiritu Santo, Vatthe is home to astonishing biodiversity, hosting over two-thirds of the South Pacific archipelago's land and freshwater birds and many of its endemic species.

But just a single ranger, traditional chief Bill Tavue, patrols the 2,720-hectare site, whose name means "estuary" in the local Na language.

Lack of funding for conservation projects, disregard for government regulations and the need to clear land for farming means that logging is common, making Tavue's battle to protect the forest all the harder.

So he hopes that the glossy green leaf of the namele, which resembles a small palm, can help him protect what remains.

The plant, known to science by the botanical name Cycas seemannii, grows across the western Pacific region, but holds particular significance in Vanuatu.

"In our culture, no one is allowed to touch the namele, only the moli," Tavue said, using a local word for chieftain.

When a namele leaf is placed somewhere, people know not to touch anything nearby, he explained.

- Leaf of peace -

Tavue comes from Matantas, a small village on the north coast of Espiritu Santo, one of the more than 80 islands that make up the Vanuatu archipelago.

When Portuguese navigator Pedro Fernandez de Quiros landed there in 1606, he believed he had discovered the fabled "Great Southern Land".

In those days, Vanuatu's tribes used the namele leaf to mark boundaries that could not be crossed on pain of death -- a technique applied after wars to protect peace agreements.

More recently, locals in Matantas realised the leaf could help protect the forest, and began publicising its presence in Vatthe as a way to keep outsiders away.

The idea has caught on, and the government in Vanuatu's capital Port Vila now officially advocates that chiefs elsewhere use similar taboos to protect nature.

Traditional law still holds real sway in Vanuatu -- the country's Malvatumauri Council of Chiefs is made of up custom chiefs from across the nation and holds real political power.

Proponents of invoking the namele leaf taboo for conservation say it has helped keep Vatthe Conservation Area largely intact, despite few other protections.

But they acknowledge that the leaf and even growing national and international attention to Vatthe's importance are far from enough.

After one recent cyclone, Chinese loggers working in Vanuatu were given permission to pick up dead wood in the reserve.

But locals allege that was used as cover to log inside the area.

Officials at Vanuatu's Department of Forests and Department of Environmental Protection and Conservation did not respond to AFP's requests for comment about those claims.

While Vanuatu has tough forestry laws, it is unclear how effective those measures have been in practice.

- 'We don't destroy' -

The leaf taboo holds weight in Espiritu Santo's mountainous west as well, where grassroots environmentalists created the Santo Sunset Environment Network to protect their forests.

They make educational visits to schools in villages often only accessible by hours-long boat rides and have persuaded chiefs there to ban logging and invoke the namele leaf and other taboos to enforce it.

Those caught breaking the taboo risk being fined a chicken or a pig -- a traditional form of currency in Vanuatu once used to pay 'bride prices'.

Project manager Joses Togase said that logging is driven by poverty and a lack of understanding about the impact.

"They need money, but they were not realising the negative impact on the resources," he said.

In some areas, trees are cleared to grow subsistence crops like yams, cassava, taro and sweet potato, with growing communities seeing little option but to expand into forests.

Richard Rojo, the network's vice-chairman, is himself a subsistence farmer turned environmentalist, motivated by the need to protect his country's forests for his children and descendants.

"I just hope they will enjoy their resources, in their place, just as I am enjoying it now," he said.

In Matantas, ranger Tavue's parents, retired chief Solomon and his wife Purity say they are saddened by the state of the forest.

"We have taboos. We don't destroy our rivers. We don't destroy our resources," Purity said.

"Now we find out that the forest is starting to be damaged. The people started to slowly walk into the forest."

Her son trained four others to help him patrol, but they all gave up the unpaid work.

Tavue wants to see payment for forest protection, like carbon credit programmes, that can help fund work like his.

"We really want this conservation area to continue.

"If you don't have money you cannot continue."

O.Mehta--DT