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The Iwokrama International Centre is now mulling the use of cameras and drones to manage the protected rainforest, as illegal activities increase within the area.

In a statement, the rainforest conservation body indicated that there was a proliferation of single-person operations. These operations appear to use metal detectors and spades.

Discoveries were made of ‘several four-inch dredges and substantive destruction to the forest floor’.

According to the Centre, this act is viewed as persons taking advantage of the COVID-19 situation.

“These activities, the Centre believes, are being perpetuated by individuals taking advantage of the current restrictions and lockdown protocols established to combat the COVID-19 virus. The Centre would like to again remind the public and other stakeholders that these activities are not allowed in the Iwokrama Forest unless the Centre gives express written permission for any of these activities to be undertaken,” the body said.

It added that enough resources have been dispensed on sensitisation sessions and other engagements in the past and in recent times to educate the public on activities which were not permitted.

“We conducted an education and awareness activity so the public should now be well aware of the boundaries of the Iwokrama Forest and permitted activities in the forest. Again, over this last weekend, the Centre’s staff together with teams from the Corps of Wardens under the Ministry of Natural Resources and the Guyana Police Force (GPF) carried out raids in the Iwokrama Forest,” the missive highlighted.

The Centre’s monitoring team works with the regulatory institutions in Guyana – the Natural Resources Corps of Wardens; the GPF; the Guyana Forestry Commission (GFC); the Guyana Geology and Mines Commission (GGMC) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

As such, they have pledged to “continue to undertake regular monitoring and enforcement activities within the environs of the Iwokrama Forest, and the Centre will also be rigidly enforcing the prescribed penalties under the Iwokrama Act and other laws of Guyana to any person(s) found illegally operating in the Iwokrama Forest.”

For now, cameras will be installed in key locations. A drone was also acquired with facial recognition software for remote aerial monitoring. The Centre also plans on establishing a monitoring staLusignan Landfill erupts...

A team of six persons, with assistance from an excavator and a water pump, was used to contain the blaze, but that task reportedly took the team a few hours to complete.

“The security will be monitoring the area overnight, and report any sightings of smoke in the area,” the Ministry has said.

Guyana Times tried to contact the Ministry for an update on the situation, but calls went unanswered.

Landfill fires are prone to reignition if not doused properly. In some cases, the heat penetrates layers of debris and remains trapped. Presently, there are a number of these sites in Guyana, situated at Eccles, Belle Vue, Lusignan, Lethem, and Mabaruma, among other places.

Back in 2015, a massive fire that erupted at the Haags Bosch Landfill at Eccles was extinguished only after many weeks of combined efforts. After that fire had consumed the site and affected many nearby residents, workers had managed to restore the landfill, and it has been up and running ever since. New equipment, such as shredders and a tarpaulin deployer, were also installed to assist with innovative waste composting and storage.

“The Centre is offering a reward for any information leading to the arrest and successful prosecution of persons(s) involved in illegal activities in the Iwokrama Forest. The Centre will also be following up on information it received on specific mining operators who we have been told have been working in the Iwokrama Forest. Any arrests will be fully publicised.”

Persons guilty of any illegal practices can be fined $100,000 or face imprisonment for a period of one year.

The Iwokrama International Centre for Rain Forest Conservation and Development was created in the run-up to the Rio Summit in 1992. It is a key environmental programme dedicated by the Government of Guyana to the Commonwealth in 1989 at the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting in Malaysia.

Illegal operations discovered at protected Iwokrama Rainforest tion to monitor boat traffic.

It is said that landfills which do not cover their waste with daily cover suffer air intrusion. This provides the oxygen required for increased biological activity, which creates substantial heat and can result in spontaneous combustion of materials in those landfills. If this combustion remains unchecked, it can burn deeper into the waste materials and result in deep-seated fires.

FROM PAGE 9

Since its official founding, through an Act of Parliament in 1996, signed off by then President Dr Cheddi Jagan, Iwokrama has sought to advance best practices in the sustainable management of the world’s remaining rainforests.

Iwokrama manages the 371,000 hectares (nearly one million acres) of Iwokrama Forest in central Guyana to show how tropical forests can be conserved and sustainably used for ecological, social, and economic benefits to local, national and international communities. Illegal operations detected by the Iwokrama International Centre

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