sudanese wildlife ap.jpeg
- Updated
In this photo of Thursday March 14 2019, a field burns after locals set it on fire, a tactic used to clear swaths of land and use it for cultivation but its a tactic that threatens nearby animal park land. South Sudan is trying to rebuild its vast national parks and game reserves following a five-year civil war that killed nearly 400,000 people. The conflict stripped the country of much wildlife but biodiversity remains rich with more than 300 mammal species, including 11 primates, but poaching is a growing threat.(AP Photo Sam Mednick)
As featured on
South Sudan is trying to rebuild its six national parks and 13 game reserves, which cover more than 13% of the country’s terrain, following the five-year civil war that ended last year after killing nearly 400,000 people. A fragile peace deal still has key steps to carry out.
Poll
Most Popular
Articles
- Mother demands answers after son dies from severe injuries in Louisville backyard incident
- Louisville police searching for missing 25-year-old man last seen in Russell neighborhood
- Kentucky warns unauthorized highway signs will be removed
- Louisville police release 'heartbreaking' body camera video showing officers kill suicidal woman
- CRAWFORD | What Trump's executive order on college sports actually does
- A Kentucky Derby fixture steps away: Mike Battaglia retires as oddsmaker
- So Happy wins Santa Anita Derby, giving 60-year-old jockey Mike Smith a shot at Kentucky Derby
- Man killed, woman injured in single-vehicle crash in east Louisville
- 32nd annual Easter parade hops down Frankfort Avenue in Louisville
- 2 Louisville residents charged after allegedly stealing hundreds of pounds of explosives