Ngamba Chimpanzee Sanctuary Island has been ranked
as the best chimpanzee sanctuary in Africa by Jane Goodall, a United Nations
ambassador of peace.
A powerhouse primatologist, ethologist and
anthropologist, Goodall is also the founder of the Jane Goodall Institute.
She says she based her ranking on the kind of
attention and care accorded to the primates, which are highly threatened by
extinction.
There are 29 chimpanzee sanctuaries in the whole of
the African continent. Two of these were founded by Goodall under her Jane
Goodall Institute. She has been supporting the other 27 through funding.
Found majorly in the tropics, you will find these
sanctuaries in Uganda, Sudan, Kenya, Tanzania, DR Congo and Rwanda.
There are also some in South Africa and Sudan.
Speaking at her 80th birthday which was held at Lake
Victoria Island, Goodall said she observed that the 47 chimpanzees on Ngamba
Island were loved and treated with so much care like no other on the planet.
Jane Goodall mingles with the chimps at Ngamba sanctuary |
“For the last couple of years, I have been moving
from one sanctuary to another across the continent, but never have I seen
chimpanzee caregivers treat the primates with so much care and love before.
“They have fully acknowledged the fact that
chimpanzees are man’s closest relatives and treat them with so much love and
attention. I am overwhelmed,” she the delighted octogenarian.
The sanctuary’s top ranking is seen as potential
pull for the local tourism industry.
According to Lilly Ajarova, the sanctuary’s
executive director, Goodall’s recognition of Ngamba as the top sanctuary in the
continent could be a positive turning point, which could attract more tourists.
“Owing to the fact that Goodall is an inspirational
figure who commands over 10 million followers worldwide inclusive of tourists
and conservationists, her credit of Ngamba is destined to fire up its annual
tourists turn-up from its annual 4000 to 5000 to nothing short of an impressive
influx,” she says.
Ajarova is quick to add that, this will play an
instrumental role in the conservation of the primates whose population across
Africa country is dwindling at a high as many people continue to hold them in
captivity and degrade their habitat.
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