STE Research Camp Flooding - Two months on
Nairobi, 11 May 2010
We are pleased to report that much progress
has been made in rebuilding and reequipping our research centre in Samburu,
following its destruction by the surging floodwaters of the Ewaso River on
March 4th, 2010. We owe our progress to the tremendous and overwhelming support
of our friends and donors who responded to the calamity by generous donations
for the rebuilding effort. We are also grateful for the support of the Kenyan
and international media, who publicised our plight and helped raise
international awareness. We are well on track to resuming our all-important
scientific work at the facility at pre-flood levels, which for many years has
helped the world understand and conserve elephant populations.
The best example of this is STE’s participation at the United Nation’s
Convention on the International Trade of Endangered Species (CITES) meeting in
the direct aftermath of the flood. In Doha, Qatar, the parties to the
convention met to vote on the Zambian & Tanzanian proposals to down list
the status of their elephants to appendix II and renew the legal ivory trade.
The STE research team actively steered the debate on the ground to ensure the
proposals were rejected. Although this was good news, serious issues still
remain and the battle for the elephants is far from over.
The decisions taken at CITES determine the
future of the world’s species, including elephants, and our efforts at the
event went a long way towards ensuring their survival. Read more about CITES.
Whilst debate raged at CITES, we were busy picking up the pieces of our camp
and making plans for the rebuilding effort. Currently, all staff are housed in
camping tents provided by the British army immediately after the flooding.
However, permanent living quarters are being constructed which will make life
at the camp more comfortable then ever before. The new structures will be eco
friendly, as well as flood proof, relocated to higher ground to ensure greater
security and minimal human footprint on the environment. We expect to have them
up in the next two months.
Access to food and drinking water was greatly disrupted by the flooding, which
destroyed our well, refrigeration facilities, and bridge used for
transportation of supplies. Our well is now functioning again, thanks to the
generosity of near by road construction crews who provided us with building
material. Our fridge has also been emptied of mud and reinstated, allowing us
to enjoy fresh nutritious meals once again.
Our scientists in Samburu are once again in the field, busy monitoring the
movements of elephant families returning to the area. We are still raising
funds to repurchase essential field equipment including digital cameras for
recording elephant ids, high-speed computers, and elephant radio tracking
collars. New, high tech equipment will enable us to enhance our operations and
monitor greater elephant numbers. We are also in the process of restocking our
library, as the flood washed our priceless collection of books and field guides
away.
As we put together the pieces of our camp, we hope that keep us in your
thoughts and donate to our rebuilding effort. With your support, we look
forward to an exciting 2010 at the STE camp.
Yours sincerely, Iain Douglas-Hamilton and the STE Team!
To donate to STE’s rebuilding effort, for online donation in UK please access http://www.justgiving.com/ste-research-camp-floods
For US donations please access our Network for Good link here. (Please specify the donation is for "Save the Elephants" in the 'Designation' field.)
For all media inquiries please contact:
Natalia Mroz: +254 (0)718
200952 or natalia@savetheelephants.org






