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Belize Audubon Society’s Visitor Center In Crooked Tree Burns, Residents Not Grieving Its Loss
posted (May 15, 2017)
The Crooked Tree Wildlife Sanctuary - established in 1984, it's one of Belize's first major reserves, and is one of only two sites in the country designated as "Wetlands of International Importance," what are known as RAMSAR sites. But, behind all those fancy titles, there's long been friction the ideal of preservation and the practical realities of traditional fishing and hunting practices. Basically, many residents of Crooked Tree "hold grudge" against the Audubon for cramping their long established patterns of using the land to eat. And that's why the community isn't exactly grieving after the Audubon Society building went up in flames this weekend. Daniel Ortiz has more on the fire and the background to it:...

Daniel Ortiz reporting
On Saturday morning, after 17 years of overlooking the Crooked Tree Lagoon, the Belize Audubon Society's Visitor's Center was completely destroyed by fire.

It was rather poor timing for the residents of Crooked Tree. Cashew Fest, the biggest event for this community, was ongoing, and they could have done without the negative publicity around the blaze.

Amanda Burgos Acosta - Executive Director, Belize Audubon Society
"Around 3:30 on Saturday morning I had gotten a call from the site manager Mr. Hendy, informing me that the building was on fire. We have 2 staff that lives on island, so they are local from Crooked Tree and they had also been calling to inform me that the building was on fire."

"By 3:30 it was already fully engulfed in flames and there was nothing much we could do."

Steven Anthony - Crooked Tree Villager
"The timing, I was very saddened by the timing. The visitor center is right at the entrance to Crooked Tree and as everybody knows we have cashew fest this weekend. So the timing on a whole was unfortunate."

Orin Smith - Station Manager, National Fire Service
"National Fire Services received and responded to a call of a structural fire in Crooked Tree. On arrival on the scene, a40x40 wooden and concrete structure was seen destroyed by fire. The remaining fires were put out."

"Investigation into the cause of that fire is still presently ongoing."

Amanda Burgos Acosta - Executive Director, Belize Audubon Society
"I think a replacement value is what I can give, it was a 40x40 kind of Mennonite structure, along with the artworks and the displays of what it would be in is anywhere in the area on $60,000-$70,000 to replace it."

So, was fire caused naturally, or did someone want to send a message to Audubon by burning it down intentionally? The Fire Department will have to investigate the cause of the fire to determine that, at this time, however, the village council doesn't think that someone intentionally lit it on fire

Dean Tillett - PR Officer, Crooked Tree Village Council
"I believe in terms of our people, despite all the things that we have heard and all the I guess the satisfaction in regards to Belize Audubon managing the resource here in Crooked Tree, I really wouldn't see any of our villages doing something like that intentionally to set the visitor center on fire. We are hoping that that is something that may have happen due to some natural cause."

But the people of Crooked Tree aren't exactly mourning the loss of the Visitor's Center either.

Steven Anthony - Crooked Tree Villager
"Whatever the reason was, I feel saddened that it happened. Actually because it was a beautiful building, a lot of effort went into making the building that way. The problem I believe - on the other side the conflict is I do feel that Audubon could have done more for Crooked Tree."

"I respect the name, I respect what they put out, but I feel like in Crooked Tree, Audubon had lost focus on what they were actually here to do. Besides birding, they took up the job of fish police, wood police and general just putting regulations down on our fisher people that been doing this for over 250 years we'd been fishing and we are still arguing about fish. So it's not going to go anywhere. We are arguing about lumber. It's not going to go anywhere. We don't have to argue about birds, because we all love the birds."

Dean Tillett - PR Officer, Crooked Tree Village Council
"Definitely, there has been concerns and we will not dismiss the fact. We have continuously been having issues, because our council is here to represent our people first and foremost. While we enjoy a more healthier relationship at this time with Belize Audubon, our mandate is primarily first to address the concerns of our people and that comes first and we will not dismiss the fact that there is some concern like Steve mentions in regard to the local fishermen - in regards of the lot of things that are put in place in terms of the government policies that Belize Audubon has to manage."

We certainly saw some of those concerns back in November of 2012 when villagers banded together to protest against Audubon and the regulations against fishing, logging and hunting. They were convinced that the enforcement was stifling their way of life:

FILE: NOVEMBER 16, 2012
Protestor
"Audubon must go because we run things - things don't run we. Everything you do, you have to do it properly in my village Crooked Tree number one."

Dudley Tillett, Villager
"They are taking away our livelihood. We used to hunt for a living; we used to hunt armadillo and gibnut for a living. I educate my little sisters from that - they have master's degree right now from hunting for armadillo and gibnut. They want to take that away from us."

Dudley Tillett
"They are taking our livelihood away from me. They don't want us to fish or hunt."

James Dawson, Villager
"Wildlife means everything that moves in the village - they wants to control. That is what the village is upset about because the village lives off the fish. We have cattle and we have to cut posts for our fence."

And that dissatisfaction for Audubon has not cooled off over the nearly 4 and a half years since then

Steven Anthony - Crooked Tree Villager
"We in Crooked Tree are very conservation minded people. We could do this the same way that Burrell Boom does it, the way SATIIM does it, the same way TIDE does it, the same way a whole bunch of other places decided to run their own sanctuary. I believe this may be the only sanctuary in the country that does charge an entrance fee to come in. That should change."

"I feel like we have qualified people in this village. We have qualified tour guides in this village. We have qualified people that work in environmental protection in this village. We have people that held big position in Audubon that lives in this village. So I feel like we could do this."

Amanda Burgos Acosta - Executive Director, Belize Audubon Society
"Designation of that protected area has been a bone of contention and I say it is the designation, because the designation is that it's a wildlife sanctuary. A wildlife sanctuary by law does not allow any extraction at all. We have worked with the village and the villagers over the years and we as Belize Audubon have tried to figure something out that is kind of amenable to everybody, because you don't do conservation in a bubble, we do have to consider livelihoods and people's bread and butter situation. It's difficult to work in a situation where there is no guidance, there is no roles. The best we were doing is saying people had to have fisher folk licenses. We've had meetings trying to determine where should be not - like a no take area - where they are spawning grounds and we should leave those. So we've had meetings in the past and we've tried to kind of work those details out, but there was no legal framework as to how to address this issue."

Steven Anthony - Crooked Tree Villager
"Audubon wants to rebuild and they have every right to. If they want to rebuild, I would hope that they sit down and talk with the people, not just one short meeting. Not just meet in front of Audubon, sit down and have meetings and meetings and listen to what the fisher folks want."

"You can't come in a place that we have been living off for so long and tell us to change; stop making money off this and give us an alternative."

Amanda Burgos Acosta
"Now as of October 2015, so about a year and a half now, there has been the national protected areas system act which has passed and what that has does is it allows for a wildlife sanctuary too which allows for wise usage and tradition usage of the resources. That would then give legal allowance to extraction of resources. However, it does have to have guidelines and it has to have some kind of structure."

Audubon told us that they have a temporary fix for the destruction of the building, which is to move a small structure to the property. The Executive Director says that there obviously needs to be a dialog with the community to figure out exactly what how they move past this fire.

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