16 04 14 News 1130 – Belgian head of Congo’s Virunga National Park shot, seriously wounded but condition improving


"FILE- Zoom

FILE- In this file photo taken on Wednesday, Aug. 11,
2012, Emmanuel de Merode, Virunga National Park director and chief
warden, poses at the park headquarters in Rumangabo, some 60 kms (40
miles) north of Goma, eastern Congo. Park officials say the Belgian
director of Africa's oldest national park, a reserve in conflict-ridden
eastern Congo, has been shot and seriously wounded. Three gunmen
ambushed de Merode on Tuesday, April 15 according spokeswoman Joanna
Natasegara. A statement on the park's website said he was traveling
between Goma, a main city in the east near Rwanda's border, and Rumangabo at the time Natasegara said Wednesday. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay,File)

AP Photo/Jerome Delay,File

Three gunmen ambushed Emmanuel de Merode, chief warden of Virunga
National Park, on Tuesday, according spokeswoman Joanna Natasegara. A
statement on the park’s website said he was travelling between Goma, a
main city in the east near Rwanda’s border, and Rumangabo at the time.

Natasegara said Wednesday that his injuries were initially very critical but that he is already getting better.

“This morning he’s much more stable. He’s out of the woods,” she said, adding that he is conscious.

Natasegara would not say where in the body he was shot. She said the motives of the gunmen are unclear.

Virunga is a UNESCO World Heritage
Site and home to endangered mountain gorillas but also a hotbed of
activity by illegal armed groups, including poachers. Virtually every
rebellion in eastern Congo in the past 30 years has started there.

The park faces myriad threats: illegal logging by militias that make millions
off charcoal; illegal fishing in the reserve’s lake; stealing of baby
gorillas for selling or killing of adults for their claws; and a budding
oil industry.

“Emmanuel is a dedicated conservationist putting his life on the line
every day to protect Virunga National Park, its rangers, its endangered species and the people that depend on the park for their livelihoods,” Lasse Gustavsson, executive director of conservation at WWF International, said in a statement on the group’s website.

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