Forest Products, Livelihoods and Conservation

(Darren Dugan) #1
Louis Defo 307

Despite recent positive evolutions such as the establishment of a
subdirectorate for NTFPs in the Ministry of Environment and Forestry, the
Cameroonian state has not yet put in place a real intervention policy destined
to significantly orient or to promote the development of NTFPs. It is not closely
or concretely interested in the harvesting of rattan, it does not grant any
subsidy to the small-scale sector and it has not made any significant and direct
investment in the sector—which moreover conforms to the policy of
liberalisation and privatisation currently in force in the production sector in
Cameroon.
The state has nevertheless undertaken some limited actions touching on
the rattan industry. The almost yearly organisation of best craftsman contests,
the financing of the Cameroonian Enfance Betamba Institution, in which rattan
craftsmen (among others) are trained, and the support for rattan basketwork
in some penitentiary establishments are the state’s only perceptible direct
interventions in the rattan environment besides the regulatory and legislative
framework mentioned earlier.

KEY ISSUES

The dynamics of the rattan industry in the Yaoundé area
The rattan industry has witnessed an interesting evolution over the past several
years resulting from certain changes in the cultural, social and economic
environments.

At the level of raw material extraction
The most significant evolution at the level of raw material extraction is the
drastic increase in harvested volume and the sustained pressure on the resource,
which has resulted in the scarcity of rattans in about 43% of the study sites
(Defo 1998). This increased pressure is given concrete expression among other
things in the harvesting of immature stems, the restriction to access in ‘private’^6
forests, the institution of payments for harvesting rights in these forests,
disputes about the harvesting sites in the ‘common’ forests and open access
areas (competition for access to the resource), frequent changes of harvesting
zones and the increase in the distance between the harvesting sites and the
living quarters (for example in Zimakoé, the average distance has increased
from about 6 km to 9 km between 1992 and 1997 (Defo 1998, 1999a)). The
pressure was mainly due to the persistent population growth and urban
development, technical changes, the fall in the prices of cocoa and coffee,
the economic crisis, which resulted in underemployment, unemployment,
pauperisation of the masses and an appreciable increase in the number of
harvesters. The extension of clearing for foodstuff farming to the detriment
of rattan sites and the shortening of the fallow period in some villages
contributed to the reduction in the availability of the resource and the dynamics
of the rattan stands. Furthermore, a significant expansion of the supply area
was noticed with the sprouting up in the ranks of harvesting sites around new
villages such as Mapan, Avebé, Meguéme, Mbega among others. This extension

17Rattan.P65 307 22/12/2004, 11:05

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