Zürcher Nachrichten - Sacred leaf offers hope for Vanuatu's threatened forests

EUR -
AED 4.311301
AFN 74.547352
ALL 95.384834
AMD 432.027627
ANG 2.101223
AOA 1077.68016
ARS 1635.561812
AUD 1.625409
AWG 2.113098
AZN 1.998007
BAM 1.955481
BBD 2.364324
BDT 144.297057
BGN 1.958257
BHD 0.44303
BIF 3494.344399
BMD 1.173943
BND 1.494362
BOB 8.111676
BRL 5.750443
BSD 1.173913
BTN 112.19916
BWP 15.845481
BYN 3.282078
BYR 23009.289523
BZD 2.360915
CAD 1.609054
CDF 2595.587989
CHF 0.917096
CLF 0.026765
CLP 1053.414632
CNY 7.976922
CNH 7.974762
COP 4416.339638
CRC 535.714821
CUC 1.173943
CUP 31.109499
CVE 110.247001
CZK 24.323982
DJF 209.034983
DKK 7.471398
DOP 69.278985
DZD 155.275439
EGP 62.155014
ERN 17.60915
ETB 183.292376
FJD 2.567238
FKP 0.860003
GBP 0.867973
GEL 3.140336
GGP 0.860003
GHS 13.252836
GIP 0.860003
GMD 85.697422
GNF 10300.362242
GTQ 8.956576
GYD 245.589905
HKD 9.189745
HNL 31.214904
HRK 7.531083
HTG 153.365615
HUF 357.255026
IDR 20542.893256
ILS 3.417388
IMP 0.860003
INR 112.380246
IQD 1537.748948
IRR 1539688.323871
ISK 143.796334
JEP 0.860003
JMD 185.489717
JOD 0.832306
JPY 184.990576
KES 151.638135
KGS 102.661135
KHR 4709.231175
KMF 491.882621
KPW 1056.570428
KRW 1748.049003
KWD 0.361633
KYD 0.978228
KZT 544.483427
LAK 25733.798722
LBP 105121.237995
LKR 379.169712
LRD 214.824013
LSL 19.403915
LTL 3.466349
LVL 0.710106
LYD 7.426788
MAD 10.713351
MDL 20.090463
MGA 4905.199181
MKD 61.604506
MMK 2464.052776
MNT 4203.71536
MOP 9.465714
MRU 46.826355
MUR 54.814304
MVR 18.090348
MWK 2035.65899
MXN 20.246885
MYR 4.618292
MZN 75.019512
NAD 19.403832
NGN 1609.534843
NIO 43.203131
NOK 10.769586
NPR 179.518457
NZD 1.974326
OMR 0.451412
PAB 1.173908
PEN 4.02326
PGK 5.113165
PHP 72.158824
PKR 327.015904
PLN 4.248148
PYG 7165.860628
QAR 4.27902
RON 5.205147
RSD 117.377916
RUB 86.664888
RWF 1716.897763
SAR 4.404381
SBD 9.429416
SCR 16.278748
SDG 704.953772
SEK 10.891988
SGD 1.493831
SHP 0.876467
SLE 28.880555
SLL 24617.00043
SOS 670.893328
SRD 43.909588
STD 24298.257018
STN 24.496105
SVC 10.271323
SYP 129.755281
SZL 19.396916
THB 38.055712
TJS 10.975808
TMT 4.120541
TND 3.413943
TOP 2.826574
TRY 53.292685
TTD 7.966733
TWD 37.012676
TZS 3037.576017
UAH 51.594297
UGX 4412.279655
USD 1.173943
UYU 46.682379
UZS 14240.675079
VES 586.777994
VND 30920.493711
VUV 138.905026
WST 3.180559
XAF 655.849926
XAG 0.014043
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.172641
XCG 2.115664
XDR 0.813965
XOF 655.852719
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.047282
ZAR 19.404638
ZMK 10566.899159
ZMW 22.098392
ZWL 378.009277
  • CMSD

    -0.0450

    23.565

    -0.19%

  • RBGPF

    -2.6100

    61

    -4.28%

  • CMSC

    -0.0150

    23.105

    -0.06%

  • NGG

    -1.1000

    86.06

    -1.28%

  • RIO

    -0.6900

    107.21

    -0.64%

  • RYCEF

    -0.6900

    16.1

    -4.29%

  • BCE

    0.2150

    24.495

    +0.88%

  • RELX

    -0.1700

    33.1

    -0.51%

  • GSK

    1.0800

    50.89

    +2.12%

  • JRI

    -0.0150

    13.115

    -0.11%

  • BCC

    -1.4500

    67.75

    -2.14%

  • VOD

    -1.4200

    14.9

    -9.53%

  • BTI

    1.9550

    62.395

    +3.13%

  • AZN

    2.3800

    184.24

    +1.29%

  • BP

    0.0900

    44.31

    +0.2%

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."

Ch.Siegenthaler--NZN