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BirdLife
International
BirdLife International is
a global conservation network of non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
present in more than 100 countries, with more than 60 autonomous Partner
organizations. Together we are the leading authority on the status of
birds and their habitats. Over ten million people now support the BirdLife
Partnership. Partners work together on shared priorities, programmes and
policies, learning from each other to achieve real conservation results.
The BirdLife Partnership promotes sustainable living as a means of conserving
birds and biodiversity.
For further information on
the global work of the BirdLife International Partneship go to www.birdlife.org
BirdLife
International in Indochina
BirdLife International in Indochina is a regional programme of
the BirdLife Secretariat, BirdLife International in Indochina
works to promote conservation in the Kingdom of Cambodia, the Lao People’s
Democratic Republic, the Union of Myanmar and the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam. BirdLife International took the step of establishing an Indochina
programme as a means to address global conservation priorities in a region
lacking indigenous civil society. Our name was chosen to reflect the biogeographic
region we cover which is the Indochinese peninsula, sometimes now also
called the Greater Mekong Region. Note that in the Kingdom of Thailand
the BirdLife Partner organization is the Bird Conservation Society of
Thailand www.bcst.org
Mission
Statement
BirdLife International in Indochina seeks to promote the conservation
of habitats, sites and species by working with government and non-government
partners to:
- Provide support for improved
planning and management of important habitats, sites and species;
- Introduce and advocate new
ideas for integrating biodiversity conservation into planning and policy;
- Stimulate greater public
interest in birds and biodiversity, and awareness of the need for biodiversity
conservation;
- Develop capacity for improved
management of habitat, sites and species; and
- Provide information on biodiversity
and protected areas to planners, policy makers and other interest groups.
Why
BirdLife is working in Indochina
Biodiversity conservation in the Indochina region faces major challenges;
The environmental context
1. Continuing rapid conversion and fragmentation of primary landscapes,
especially lowland evergreen forests, riverine habitats, grasslands and
wetlands to agricultural and aquacultural habitats [Saving Asia’s
Threatened Birds will be available online shortly].
2. Rapid rates of decline amongst large-bodied species, especially storks,
ibises, bustards and vultures [Threatened
Birds of Asia].
3. The region supports high levels of endemism in birds and biodiversity
[Please visit BirdLife International
webiste for Endemic Bird Areas of the World].
4. Continuing decline across much of the region the quality of remaining
forest.
5. High human population growth rates.
6. High rural human population densities in many parts of the region.
The
regional socio-political context
1. High rates of economic growth and consumption of natural resources.
2. High levels of rural poverty across much of the region and benefits
of globalization are enjoyed by urban elites only.
3. Civil society remains under-developed throughout the region.
4. The pace of democratic reform is slow.
5. The pace of government institutional reform is slow.
6. Levels of government corruption are high.
7. The mass media are under close government control throughout much of
the region.
The operational context
1. Donors are regularly shifting focal areas, the scale of funding within
the region and between countries within it.
2. Donor interest in supporting biodiversity conservation is waning.
3. Donor funding schemes are often complex, slow and bureaucratic.
4. INGOs are competing for diminishing donor resources.
5. Government’s vary in their attitude and level of support for
NGOs.
6. Government’s commit insufficient resources to biodiversity conservation
as a result protected areas management is poor and insufficient areas
are designated as protected areas in most countries.
7. Indigenous skill-base for biodiversity management is low.
8. All countries in the region have signed and ratified the Convention
on Biodiversity and Ramsar convention on wetlands.
9. Levels of public and government awareness and interest in biodiversity
conservation remain low.
How
BirdLife International in Indochina assists conservation
Our country programme offices in Hanoi, Phnom Penh and Yangon coordinate
and manage a portfolio of conservation projects, supported by international
donors which promote the goals of BirdLife International around the global
themes of Species, Sites, Habitats and People.
Species
Throughout the region we monitor the trends of globally threatened species.
These are species assigned an IUCN category of threat [link to IUCN category
website]. In Cambodia we are currently monitoring changing population
trends in two Critically Endangered species the White-rumped Vulture Gyps
bengalensis and Slender-billed Vulture Gyps tenuirostris
[open press
release] We are also supporting research on the Endangered Giant Ibis
Pseudibis gigantea. In Myanmar we are conducting status surveys
for the Critically Endangered Gurney’s Pitta Pitta gurneyi
[open press
release] and the Pink-headed Duck Rhodonessa caryophyllacea.
In Vietnam we monitor the status of the Endangered Black-faced Spoonbill
Platalea minor and the Vulnerable Sarus Crane Grus antigone.
Sites
To date most of the work of BirdLife International in Indochina
has been focused on the conservation of sites. A site is a unit of habitat
which can managed at the local level. Throughout our region by a process
of conservation evaluation involving years of field research, we have
identified a network of Important Bird Areas (IBAs), which form part of
a wider global network of sites which are critical for the conservation
of birds and other biodiversity. In Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam we have
published directories of IBAs in English [click
here for IBA Directory in Vietnam] and local languages [the online
version of these publication will be available soon] which will enable
governments, donors and conservation practitioners in improved land-use
planning and targeting conservation and development assistance. BirdLife
International in Indochina is now advocating the conservation
of these sites, sometimes within the framework of national protected areas
systems and sometimes by promoting Site Support Groups, which are community
based groups of stakeholders.
Habitats
Are units of landscape defined in terms of their biodiversity attributes
which require management at central or provincial government level, which
may necessitate sectoral approaches to achieve conservation. They provide
the broader context within which sites are located. Endemic Bird Areas
(EBAs) are landscapes as defined by BirdLife International of less than
50,000 km2 which support aggregations of endemic bird species.
For a full list and description
of all EBAs in Indochina go to BirdLife
International webiste. Research conducted by BirdLife International
in Indochina has focused on IBAs and has resulted in the identification
of the Kon Tum Plateau as a new EBA, based on the discovery and description
of three bird species new to science. In Cambodia BirdLife is a member
of the Dry Forests Coalition which promotes an integrated and coordinated
approach to the conservation of the northern dry forests. In Vietnam BirdLife
is a member of the Forest Sector Support Programme and Partnership which
brings together government, donors and international non-government organizations
(NGOs) to coordinate the development of the forestry sector.
People
BirdLife International in Indochina believes that people lie
at the heart of the solutions to conserve biodiversity. We have a dedicated
and professional staff [link to staff] and
we work in partnership with government, donors, other international and
local NGOs, and community-based groups to promote, advocate and achieve
conservation. We have established Site-support Groups at five IBAs in
Vietnam and three IBAs in Cambodia. Later this year we hope to establish
our first IBA Site-support Group in Myanmar. In order to empower government,
donors and those within the conservation community we publish a range
of technical reports [link
to publication] and to help promote an interest in birds and their
conservation, we have published local language bird field guides in Burmese,
Lao and Vietnamese.
Project
Partners
Since its inception BirdLife
International in Indochina has worked in collaboration with our
host governments, the international donor community and international
NGOs who share our vision. At the invitation of the Government of Vietnam
in 1996 we established a Representative Office in Hanoi. In Vietnam our
government project partners have included the Ministry of Agriculture
and Rural Development, including the Forest Protection Department and
the Forest Inventory and Planning Institute and the Secretariat of the
Forest Sector Support Programme and Partnership. We have also worked closely
with the Institute of Ecology and Biological Resources and numerous provincial
people’s committees. In early 2004 following signing of memoranda
of understanding with the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry
and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Government of Cambodia, we
established a country programme office in Phnom Penh. In Myanmar we share
a project office with a local NGO the Biodiversity And Nature Conservation
Association and hope to work more closely with the government in the future.
Previously our donors have
included the ASEAN Regional Centre for Biodiversity Conservation, Danida,
the European Commission, Global Environment Fund, Keidandren, the Royal
Netherlands Embassy, the United Nations Development Programme, and the
World Bank.
We have collaborated closely
with the American Museum of Natural History, Conservation International,
the Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund, ENV, Fauna and Flora International
Indochina Programme, Missouri Botanical Gardens, Royal Botanic Gardens
Kew, The Natural History Museum (British Museum), Tropical Forest Trust,
Wildlife Conservation Society Cambodia and Lao Programmes, Vietnam - Russia
Tropical Centre and the WWF Indochina Programme,
Our current donors and collaborators
are;
Biodiversity And Nature Conservation
Association
Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund
Danida (through the Royal Danish Embassy Cambodia)
Darwin Initiative
Forestry Administration (Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry,
Cambodia)
Forest Protection Department (Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development,
Vietnam)
Keidandren
Global Conservation Fund
MacArthur Foundation
Smithsonian Institution
Wildlife Conservation Society
BirdLife
Staff
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