Tag: Elephants

  • Nigeria’s last elephants wrestle for survival in forgotten reserve as Omo Forest suffers neglect

    Nigeria’s last elephants wrestle for survival in forgotten reserve as Omo Forest suffers neglect

    At dawn, the Omo Forest comes alive with a cacophony of whispers. Giant mahogany trees are blurred into a soft cloak of mist, with the melody of chirping birds emerging from the morning fog. Somewhere deep in the forest, some of the last herd of elephants in southwestern Nigeria quietly map the damp soil with their feet.

    But the calm is deceptive. Omo Forest Reserve, a 1,305-square-kilometer protected area in Ogun State, is under siege. Chainsaws snarl in the distance. Cocoa farms spread like wounds through the undergrowth. Timber trucks rumble down bush paths carved illegally into the reserve. And poachers, emboldened by weak enforcement, leave behind snares, gun shells, and fear.

    Here, Nigeria’s last forest elephants are forced to the brink.

    Amid this crisis stands one man, Emmanuel Olabode, a conservationist whose life has become entwined with the fate of these elephants. For nearly a decade, he has walked the forest, tracked the animals, recruited rangers, and tried to reconcile communities with conservation.

    Olabode Emmanuel, one of Nigeria's most outspoken rangers
    Olabode Emmanuel, one of Nigeria’s most outspoken rangers

    The ranger who cares 

    “When I first heard about elephants in Omo, I didn’t know they were so close to Lagos,” Olabode recalled, his voice carrying both awe and disbelief. “It took months of following footprints, droppings, broken branches, signs everywhere, but no actual sighting. When I finally saw them, it was one of the most intriguing moments of my life.”

    As project manager of the Forest Elephant Initiative at the Nigerian Conservation Foundation, Olabode leads a small team of 12 rangers tasked with protecting Omo’s fragile wildlife.

    “We use the elephants as a flagship species,” he explained. “If we can save them, we can save everything else here, chimpanzees, monkeys, birds, even the trees themselves.”

    But elephants are only a part of the story. Omo shelters over 200 tree species and more than 100 types of mammals and birds, from the rare Nigeria-Cameroon chimpanzee to the endemic white-throated guenon monkey. Each faces the same fate: survival or vanishing, determined by how quickly the destruction of Omo is curbed.

    “Biodiversity is a critical part of our work,” Olabode explained. “We are losing species that once defined this forest. Some are so rare now that even researchers spend years without spotting them.”

    A forest under siege

    Driving into Omo Forest is like stepping into two colliding worlds. On one hand, towering rainforest trees soar above all else, their buttresses anchoring the soil. On the other hand, yearning gaps reveal scars of human invasion, fresh tree stumps, charred earth from slash-and-burn farming, and makeshift camps of loggers.

    loggers in the Omo reserve

    Officially, Omo is designated a Strict Nature Reserve, a classification that should bar extractive activities. In reality, illegal timber harvesting and subsistence farming flourish, threatening the integrity of the forest. Over the years, seven percent of its tree cover has been lost,  a number that underestimates the intensity of ongoing degradation.

    Olabode’s rangers routinely encounter poachers and illegal loggers, sometimes armed and aggressive. “It is dangerous work,” he admitted. “Some of them will attack anything that comes their way. We also deal with human-wildlife conflicts when elephants raid farms or when farmers encroach deeper into elephant habitat. Every day is a struggle.”

    The risks are compounded by the terrain itself: rangers trek for hours through rivers, hills, and thick undergrowth, often in torrential rains. “This is not like working in a zoo where animals are behind fences,” Olabode said. “Here, we share the same space with them.”

    Turning poachers into protectors

    Perhaps the most striking shift in Omo’s story lies in the men who once hunted its wildlife but now stand guard over it.

    For instance, Gbenga Ogunwole, a wiry man with a ready smile, hitherto spent years hunting antelope and monkeys to feed his family. Today, dressed in a faded ranger’s uniform, he patrols the forest alongside Olabode.

    “World Ranger Day is meaningful to me,” Ogunwole said. “Before, I was part of the problem. Now I’m part of the solution. People now recognise our work — to protect nature instead of destroy it.”

    By recruiting former hunters as rangers, the Forest Elephant Initiative not only reduces poaching but also integrates local knowledge of animal behaviour and forest navigation into conservation. This approach has also improved relations with nearby communities, who once saw rangers as outsiders threatening their livelihoods.

    “We regularly visit villages, talk to people about why conservation matters — not just for animals, but for human life,” Olabode explained. “When they see their own brothers wearing the ranger uniform, it changes the narrative.”

    Between Farmers, Loggers & Elephants

    Still, the battle for Omo is as much economic as it is ecological. Farmers cultivate cassava and cocoa deep inside the reserve, while loggers, some backed by powerful syndicates, target prized hardwoods like mahogany. Both groups argue they rely on the forest to survive.

    “Everybody claims the forest is theirs,” Olabode said. “The farmers say they must feed their families, the loggers say they need timber for their business. But where do the elephants go if we lose the forest?”

    The result is frequent tension. Rangers are caught in the middle, enforcing conservation laws that are often undermined by weak prosecution and political interference. Arrested loggers or poachers sometimes walk free, eroding ranger morale.

    “Our work will only succeed if policies are enforced,” Olabode insisted. “If offenders are arrested and prosecuted, it will deter others. Right now, too many cases end with nothing.”

    The farmers’ perspective is layered

    In J4, a settlement inside the reserve, cocoa trees line the forest edges in neat, cultivated rows. For thousands of farmers, cocoa is life.

    Akeji Femi, former public relations officer of the Association of Cocoa Farmers in J4, has lived here since 1995.

    “There had been no incident of elephants attacking humans,” he said. “There was already cocoa farming by the time I got here.”

    Akeji Femi, a former Public Relations Officer of the Association of Cocoa Farmers
    Akeji Femi, a former Public Relations Officer of the Association of Cocoa Farmers

    Akeji Femi, a former Public Relations Officer of the Association of Cocoa Farmers

     

    For Femi, farming in the reserve is not theft but survival. He described a system where farmers, many of them migrants, pay multiple levies to gain access to farmland.

    “We pay money to different community chiefs to get land. In 1995, we paid N5,000. Now, in 2025, it is N100,000. Then we pay to government more than N13,000 per tonne of cocoa. We pay the state Ministry of Agriculture. Most of us are visitors in these communities. We don’t fight for land. We stay where we are given.”

    We pay money to different community chiefs to get land. In 1995, we paid N5,000...
    We pay money to different community chiefs to get land. In 1995, we paid N5,000…

    For him, the solution lies not in conflict but in clearer land use policies. “What I recommend is for the government to give us a portion to do cocoa farming, while they can also set another part for forest preservation,” he said. “We know there are parts set for the elephants which we don’t go to.”

    on paper, zoning sounds good
    on paper, zoning sounds good

    On paper, this sounds simple: zoning the forest to balance agriculture with conservation.

    In reality, blurred boundaries, weak enforcement, and political interests make it far messier. Farmers often find themselves encroaching into restricted zones either knowingly or unknowingly, while rangers struggle to enforce rules without appearing hostile to communities who feel they have paid their dues.

    But while cocoa farmers defend their presence, others accuse them of being a greater threat to the forest than anyone else.

    Odunayo Ogunjobi, a timber contractor licensed by the Ogun State Ministry of Forestry, has watched with alarm as swathes of economic trees are felled to make way for cocoa plantations.

    “The government generates as much as over N8 million from me alone,” Ogunjobi said, “excluding the other indirect workers who depend on me. But illegal cocoa farmers are destroying the forest. They cut down valuable economic trees in Omo’s J4 area just to pave way for cocoa farms.”

    Odunayo Ogunjobi

    Odunayo Ogunjobi

    He recalled that during the administration of former governor  Gbenga Daniel, illegal farmers were expelled from forest reserves across the state. “As soon as Daniel left office in 2011, they all returned and increased in numbers,” he said, his frustration clear. “Now they pose a great threat to the security and economy of the state.”

    For Ogunjobi and other contractors, the issue is not just about wildlife, but also about the sustainability of the timber industry itself.

     “We are struggling to get timbers because most of the illegal contractors are taking over everywhere,” he said. “We generate a lot of revenue for the government, but no one seems to be listening to our cry. No one is monitoring the forest. At this rate, in the next two or three years, the trees or forests will go extinct.”

     Paper trail 

    Evidence of the state’s deep financial entanglement in the forest economy is captured in a document pinned on a wall at Area J4: “OGUN STATE FORESTRY PLANTATION PROJECT, AREA J4. PROJECT ACCOUNT NUMBERS FOR CONTRACTORS”.

    The notice lists official bank accounts for payments tied to different forestry activities: Eco Bank 5452011799 – for Gmelina exploitation; Eco Bank 5452011782 – for 25% FTF (Forestry Timber Fee); Wema Bank 0120291519 – demarcation amount of N20,000 and Wema Bank 0120291935 – a non-refundable amount of N50,000.

    The structured fees, covering exploitation, levies, demarcation, and administrative charges, reveal how forestry exploitation is not only permitted but institutionalised by the state. Contractors, like Ogunjobi, pay millions into these accounts. But cocoa farmers also pay chiefs, ministries, and additional levies, creating a dual system of extraction.

    This fragmentation of authority means that while the state can claim legitimacy through bank receipts, farmers can also claim legitimacy through receipts from chiefs and agricultural ministries. The result is overlapping rights and competing claims to the same forest — a recipe for conflict and unsustainable exploitation.

    The Global Ranger Crisis

    Omo’s challenges mirror a larger crisis across Africa. With human populations expanding and forests shrinking, rangers are the thin green line between survival and extinction for countless species.

    “Rangers are nature’s first line of defense,” said Linus Unah, West Africa Director for Wild Africa. “Without them, our iconic wildlife like lions, elephants, and gorillas could disappear forever.”

    Linus Unah, West Africa Director for Wild AfricaThe human cost of conservation
    Linus Unah, West Africa Director for Wild AfricaThe human cost of conservation

    Yet, beneath the passion lies sacrifice. Rangers spend weeks away from their families, exposed to harsh weather, loneliness, and sometimes hostility from their own communities.

     

    “Some rangers are ostracised because they arrest neighbours or relatives involved in illegal activities,” Unah explained. “It takes resilience and dedication.”

    Globally, the mental toll of ranger work is only beginning to be recognised. Exposure to violence, animal attacks, and isolation often leads to trauma. Without support systems, many rangers suffer in silence.

     

    “People celebrate us once a year on World Ranger Day,” said Ogunwole, the former hunter. “But for us, every day is ranger day. We wake up not knowing what we will face.”

     

    Yet, rangers remain under-resourced. Globally, there are an estimated 280,000 rangers, a fraction of the 1.5 million needed to protect 30 percent of the planet’s land and sea by 2030. Between 2006 and 2021, more than 2,300 rangers died on duty worldwide, 42 percent from criminal activity linked to wildlife crime.

     

    For Omo’s team, the lack of insurance, medical care, and protective equipment compounds the dangers. “Rangers also have families, they have dependents,” Olabode said. “They deserve life insurance, healthcare, and proper motivation. Without that, the risks are enormous.”

    The human cost of conservation

    Yet, beneath the passion lies sacrifice. Rangers spend weeks away from their families, exposed to harsh weather, loneliness, and sometimes hostility from their own communities.

    Rangers spend weeks away from their families, exposed to harsh weather, loneliness, and sometimes hostility from their own communities.
    Rangers spend weeks away from their families, exposed to harsh weather, loneliness, and sometimes hostility from their own communities.

    “Some rangers are ostracised because they arrest neighbours or relatives involved in illegal activities,” Unah explained. “It takes resilience and dedication.”

    Globally, the mental toll of ranger work is only beginning to be recognised. Exposure to violence, animal attacks, and isolation often leads to trauma. Without support systems, many rangers suffer in silence.

     

    “People celebrate us once a year on World Ranger Day,” said Ogunwole, the former hunter. “But for us, every day is ranger day. We wake up not knowing what we will face.”

    Nigeria’s Forgotten Elephants

    Elephants once roamed widely across Nigeria. Today, fewer than 400 are thought to remain in scattered pockets across the country, from Yankari Game Reserve in Bauchi to Okomu National Park in Edo. Omo Forest may hold fewer than 100, perhaps Nigeria’s last viable forest elephant population.

    Forest elephants play a critical ecological role. By feeding on fruits and trampling vegetation, they disperse seeds and open pathways that allow forests to regenerate. Scientists call them “gardeners of the forest.” Losing them would unravel Omo’s ecological fabric.

    But Nigeria’s elephants have long been neglected in conservation planning. International headlines often spotlight East Africa’s savannah giants, while their forest cousins fade in obscurity. For Olabode, this invisibility makes the struggle harder.

    “If elephants disappear from Omo, Lagos will be the only megacity in the world with elephants at its doorstep that failed to protect them,” he said quietly.

    A ray of hope

    Despite the odds, Olabode insists the fight is not a losing battle. Awareness campaigns have begun to shift community attitudes, and government officials have shown renewed interest in supporting conservation.

    “We are making progress, even if it is slow,” he said. “With government support and stakeholder collaboration, we can secure this forest.”

    Wild Africa, alongside Nigerian Conservation Foundation, is pushing for stronger laws, ranger support, and integration of conservation into national planning. “It requires political will,” Olabode stressed. “Government must act before it is too late.”

    For rangers like Odamo Yemi, the work is deeply personal. “I love to protect nature, and I love to watch animal behaviour,” he said. “Even if it is risky, it is worth it.”

    What is at stake

    The fate of Omo’s elephants is not just about wildlife. The forest provides clean water, carbon storage, and climate resilience for millions in southwestern Nigeria. Its loss would accelerate flooding, soil erosion, and heat extremes in a region already grappling with climate shocks.

    “Protecting elephants means protecting people too,” Olabode said. “If the forest is gone, where will we go?”

    As dusk settles over Omo, the forest hums with cicadas and distant birdcalls. Somewhere in the shadows, the elephants move quietly, their survival balanced precariously between conservation efforts and human pressures.

    For now, the rangers keep watch, weary but undeterred. Their fight is for elephants, for Omo, and for a future where Nigeria’s last giants are not forgotten.

     

    This article was produced in partnership with Wild Africa. It was first published on www.businessday.ng

  • Mixed feelings as wildlife trade regulator restricts African elephant export

    Mixed feelings as wildlife trade regulator restricts African elephant export

    It will become very hard to remove African elephants from their natural habitat for sale to zoos outside of the continent as this kind of trade is now under control of the global wildlife conservation organizations and governments.

    This adjustment was made after wildlife experts endorsed a resolution to limit the sale of wild elephants caught in Zimbabwe and Botswana, the leading elephant breeding nations.

    Wildlife experts, from countries that are part of an international agreement on trade in wildlife, have endorsed then approved the resolution to limit the sale of live elephants from Africa during their meeting of parties to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) in Geneva.

    But the new resolution also means zoos will no longer be able to import wild-caught African elephants to the United States, China and many other countries beyond the elephants’ natural habitat in Africa.

    With the United States voting against it, the resolution was passed by a vote of 87 in favor, 29 against and 25 abstaining. Animal advocates applauded the move, even though some felt it didn’t go far enough.

    Renowned primatologist, Jane Goodall, weighed in, too, saying she was “absolutely shocked” at the idea of separating young elephants from their families and shipping them off to zoos.

    Conservationists explained the change by giving an example, saying it would allow for an elephant already in France to be shipped to nearby Germany without having to be sent back to Africa first.

    “While it is disappointing that it is not an outright ban on trade in live elephants, the new language adds vital independent oversight and scrutiny,” said Audrey Delsink, wildlife director at Humane Society International.

    “The capture of wild African elephants for export to zoos and other captive facilities is incredibly traumatizing for individual elephants as well as their social groups,” she said in a statement.

    Dozens of celebrities, including actress Judi Dench and comedian Ricky Gervais, had signed a letter to the president of the EU’s executive branch, saying it would be “obscene for the EU to endorse snatching wild baby elephants and condemning these beautiful leviathans to a life of captive misery.”

    The EU’s action was part of a debate over language at CITES to restrict trade in live elephants to countries with “in-situ conservation programs” or secure areas in the wild, mostly in Africa.

    Botswana and Zimbabwe have the world’s largest populations of African elephants, with estimated 200,000 living in the wild.

    Meanwhile, the President of Zimbabwe, Emmerson Mnangagwa has announced that his country is planning to pull out of the UN Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora (Cites).

    Mnangagwa and other African officials are of the opinion that the new proposal would deny them some much-needed cash and that they should be free to do what they wished with their elephants.

    “The government has been pumping out a lot of money for conservation with no real return, yet our government has competing social needs,” said Tinashe Farawo, spokesman for Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority.

    “We view our animals as an economic opportunity, so we should sell our elephants”, he said.

    Farawo said that Zimbabwe, Botswana Namibia and other southern African countries would meet for consultations following the CITES meeting.

    “We cannot continue to be hamstrung and told what to do with our resources,” Farawo said.

    “We cannot continue to allow powerful countries and NGOs to set the agenda when the elephants are ours,” he said.

    “We have too many of them, so selling them should not be a problem for anyone. Why should we continue to impoverish our people when we have the resource?”, the Zimbabwean official said.

    According to reports by Modern Ghana, there are currently more than 30 wild baby elephants are being held in enclosures in Zimbabwe. They were initially destined for zoos on other continents, mainly in China. The CITES decisions are now in force. Therefore, the exports cannot proceed without contravening the new rules.

  • WCS celebrates four years of zero elephant poaching in Yankari

    WCS celebrates four years of zero elephant poaching in Yankari

    Yankari Game Reserve, home to Nigeria’s largest remaining elephant population, has experienced zero poaching in the last four years, the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) has reported.

    The announcement was made just days before officials gather for the meeting of CITES, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species. The success underscores the importance of tightening up the closure of importing countries’ domestic ivory markets, along with vigilant anti-poaching and anti-trafficking efforts.

    WCS, which helps manage the protected area, attributes the success to well-managed, well-equipped and highly trained rangers who patrol the 866 square miles (2,244 square kilometers) reserve, which also supports important populations of lion, buffalo, hippo, roan and hartebeest.

    READ ALSO: World Rangers Day 2019 in Omo

    Yankari’s elephant population remains stable at 100-150 individuals, and is expected to grow in the coming years if conservationists remain steadfast in keeping poachers out of the reserve. As recently as 2006 there were as many as 350 elephants in Yankari, but a period of heavy poaching from 2006 to 2014 reduced their numbers dramatically. Since 2014 Yankari has been managed through a co-management agreement between Bauchi State Government and WCS.

    Yankari’s elephant population remains stable at 100-150 individuals
    photo: WCS Nigeria

    Elephants are critically endangered in Nigeria, with the Yankari elephants being the only savanna elephants remaining in the country. Some forest elephants also still remain in low numbers in the forested south including Cross River National Park area (where WCS is also working to secure forest elephants and the Cross River Gorilla). Historically the Yankari savanna elephants may have been ecologically connected with the Sambisa area (impacted by Boko Haram) and perhaps also Gashaka Gumti National Park and neighboring areas of Cameroon. This is a core critical area for elephant conservation in the Sudano-Sahel Region.

    READ ALSO: Ogun elephant video: No one was injured, says expert

    Originally created as a game reserve in 1956, Yankari was upgraded to a national park in 1991. It was managed by the National Parks Service until 2006 when responsibility for the management of the reserve was handed back to Bauchi State Government. Since then tourism infrastructure has been dramatically improved. Yankari is now one of the most popular tourism destinations in Nigeria.

    “Rangers are the key to stopping poaching in protected areas” said Andrew Dunn,WCS Nigeria Program Director “Yankari is an amazing success story and shows the world that with targeted use of limited funds, and government commitment, progress can still be made provided that rangers are properly trained and supervised.”

    Rangers are the key to stopping poaching in protected areas
    photo: Natalie Ingel/WCS Nigeria
     

    Dunn attributes the success in the reserve to several factors. The leadership of Nachamada Geoffrey, Director of the Yankari Landscape for WCS, directs efforts to ensure a zero tolerance policy for corruption coupled with making sure all rangers are well-equipped in the field and trained with regular refresher courses. SMART (Spatial Monitoring and Supporting Tool) together with real time radio communications is used help guide and monitor the rangers and optimize their impact.WCS supplements rangers’ incomes with additional monies per night as an incentive whenever they are on a long-distance foot patrol.

    Nachamada Geoffrey stated, “Solid logistical support (food rations), equipment, and motivation through regular salary payments support our ranger operations day in and day out. Most of the rangers are recruited from the local community and are highly motivated to protect the wildlife of Yankari.”

    David Adejo Andrew of Nigeria’s Federal Department of Forestry and Federal Ministry of Environment also commended WCS’s efforts.

    “The efforts of the WCS in conserving the largest pool of elephant populations at the Yankari Game Reserve has given Nigeria a good platform for conserving other Elephant population in the country. This has encouraged the Nigerian Government to work with the WCS to translate this success stories to other areas,” he said.

    The future outlook

    Of course in the long-term Yankari will only survive if it has the support of the surrounding communities. Yankari is one of the main sources of employment locally, including both rangers, hotel staff and elephant guardians. WCS is also working with local schools to help develop future conservation leaders. In addition, WCS has helped establish an informant network among the communities surrounding the reserve that provides critical information on poachers.

    Building on this foundation and work ethic, significantly more resources are urgently needed to fully establish the Reserves full management systems and effectiveness.

    WCS’s conservation efforts within Yankari are supported by the Bauchi State Government, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, Embassy of France in Nigeria, Australian High Commission in Nigeria, Tusk Trust, the North Carolina Zoological Society, Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium, CITES-MIKE, the UNEP African Elephant Fund, the A.P. Leventis Conservation Foundation, the Lion Recovery Fund—an initiative of the Wildlife Conservation Network in partnership with the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation, and the Elephant Crisis Fund—a joint initiative between Save The Elephants and the Wildlife Conservation Network, in partnership with the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation.

  • Ogun elephant video: No one was injured, says expert

    Ogun elephant video: No one was injured, says expert

    Following a viral video showing a half naked young man filming two elephants, elephant conservation experts in the area have said no one was injured.

    A spokesperson for the experts, Filip Van Trier , a Belgian who has spent most of his life in Nigeria, revealed that the incident happened last Saturday, about two weeks ago around Imobi, Ogun State.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/B1I7m4VHdQ9/?igshid=6cs10nm976sy

    A small group of youngsters came from a different community having heard about the elephants, he narrated.

    The youngsters entered the elephants’ range without the rangers’s knowledge, a very dangerous thing to do.

    “This was exactly what happened last year in Baoku when a youngster was killed,” Van Trier said.

    “This will not happen again. These two elephants (male and female) left the herd recently to form there own group. All is under control.”

    The expert added that in the meantime all communities have been seriously warned.

    “We have taken extra measures,

    “We have made sure that the elephants are relaxed where they are and feel at home. There is absolutely no conflict between the elephants and villagers if not provoked. The villagers are now proud of their new friends. We are getting there to save these gentle giants.”