MASERU – THE Ministry of Forestry has introduced the Regeneration of Landscape and Livelihood (ROLL) project to address environmental degradation in the country.
Prime Minister Moeketsi Majoro launched the project, on Tuesday at the Thupa-Kubu constituency in Ha-’Matholoana.
The project is in collaboration with the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) Fund, Global Environment Facility (GEF) and Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) to restore the environment.
The project manager, Mofihli Motšetšero, said the major aim of the ROLL is to restore the environment while enhancing livelihoods.
This project, he said, would cover six districts of Butha- Buthe, Leribe, Quthing ,Thaba-Tseka, Qacha’s Nek, and Berea.
“Three places have been identified in each district except Quthing where Letšeng-la-Letsie is the only place identified,” Motšetšero said.
The Regional Director of IFAD, Sarah Mbago Bhonu, said for more than 40 years the IFAD has been supporting the government of Lesotho to alleviate poverty.
She said this project will focus on the ecosystem pointing out that climate change has been a matter of great concern to the world.
“The whole world has to work hard to mitigate climate change,” Bhonu said.
She said a total of M803 million (US$46 million) will finance the project with 360 hectares of land being utilised.
“This project thus assists in restoration of the environment,” Bhonu said, adding that the project will work in partnership with other relevant stakeholders including councils and village chiefs.
The Principal Chief of Lioli, Sempe Masupha, said the project is crucial and requires fresh minds to handle it appropriately.
Chief Masupha however said the project has been initiated at a wrong time when Basotho minds are clouded by politics.
Nonetheless, he said the district of Berea is very privileged for being the first to launch this new project.
The Minister of Forestry, Motlohi Maliehe, said Lesotho is a grassland country.
But the older generation failed to protect the land.
Maliehe said these kind of initiatives are already operational and effective as well in some places in the country.
He said they learnt from other previously implemented projects that there are villages which are benefiting.
He said they have been mandated to structure and set the policies which regulate and manage the ecosystem.
And it is through these kind of initiatives that they can achieve their mandate.
Lesotho, like other countries, is facing the challenge of climate change.
So the new project will help address it.
Now it is the responsibility of every Mosotho to generate a living out of this project, Maliehe said.
Maliehe said the project will restore Lesotho’s beauty while providing something to take them out of poverty.
He said the projects on land management which were supported by private organisations such as United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), World Food Program (WFP), IFAD all succeeded.
“The wilderness where these projects were implemented are now rich in terms of natural resources and water conservation,” he said.
He said the project which was launched in Mpharane, Mohale’s Hoek, is continuing even after the contract with a private organisation ended.
Prime Minister Moeketsi Majoro said he realised that successful rangelands are managed through expertise and commitments of the communities.
He appealed to communities to embrace the skills on rangeland management and transfer it to others.
Dr Majoro said the country is facing poverty, and climate change is exacerbating the situation.
Even the harvest for this year was so low due to heavy rainfall which forced the government to provide food subsidies, Majoro said.
Majoro said the worst case scenario of this condition is that they had a very rich land that they failed to manage as the country until its value depleted.
“We are now using the grants to restore what we wasted,” he said.
With the implementation of this project not only will the land be restored but also over 68 000 people will benefit from it.
Dr Majoro said the community should not regard this as a job creation project but as a restoration project for the land.
Refiloe Mpobole