Her indigenous fauna & flora are more Sri Lankan than the people who moved in later.
Friday, 21 October 2016
Sunday, 9 October 2016
Friday, 7 October 2016
Thilo Hoffmann – The last interview
by Rajith D. PhD
Thilo Hoffmann 1922-2014; Photo from interview |
Pioneering naturalist and conservationist Thilo Hoffmann was still
alive in his native Switzerland when I met him for what turned out to be his
last interview. Not just Sri Lankans but
the world owes him a debt of gratitude for setting in motion the protection of
the prime wet zone wildernesses in Sri Lanka, Sinharaja forest and the Peak
Wilderness under the government of Sri Lanka, outstanding global biodiversity
hotspots. Despite this, much of his
contribution is unknown in the West including his native Switzerland. This is a summary of my interview with him at
his home near Zurich on 28 December 2012.
It may provide both history and inspiration for those few audacious
enough to endeavour to follow in his footsteps and enhance what remains of Sri
Lanka’s currently dwindling biodiversity. Hoffmann’s dreams will contribute to
conservation in the future – an integrated vision of man and biodiversity from
marine reserves and coastal wilderness to montane forests that provide the
aquatic lifeblood of the nation.
Douglas Ranasinghe has published Hoffmann’s biography, The Faithful Foreigner (2015), a wonderful
tribute to the man, his work and a history of wildlife conservation on the
island. In a review of this, Rohan
Pethiyagoda that it was amazing that Hoffmann was not kicked out of the country
for his political agitations – Hoffmann had to renew his SL visa annually. As Pethiyagoda recently stated about Sri
Lankan conservation in De Silva Wijeyratne’s Wild Sri Lanka, taking a cue from European history “The renaissance
has started though may be not the enlightenment”.
My interview was a conversation and has to be seen in that
light. Not all will agree with Mr
Hoffmann, but this is precisely the point of shedding some light on a giant of
wildlife conservation in Sri Lanka who is in danger of being forgotten in
recent wildlife literature. As much of
the original conversational style has been preserved – punctuation has been
added. The forceful expressions of Mr
Hoffmann may be quoted as genuine, verbal statements. I placed several questions. Rather than detailing the entire
conversation, it has been edited and major themes highlighted in bold text representing topics
introduced by me. Bold italic
text highlights the questions for clarity, or points, posed by the author. Quotation marks are regarded as largely
redundant except in indicating general, context driven elements in the talk,
where expressed. Finally, Hoffmann managed to correct my transcript. Any errors
are my responsibility.
Early life and getting established in Sri
Lanka
I
think I published about four hundred articles …. I was there last March (2012), I always go into
book shops [in Sri Lanka] to see if there is anything new …
My date of birth is, 13 March 1922. My father was a doctor, and he was a keen
botanist and mountaineer. He took me out
as a small boy and showed me the plants, the animals and the trees. I learned these things. And my paternal grandfather had a small farm
with animals, bees and fruit trees and my maternal grandfather lived in the canton
of Shaffhausen, in a lovely rural area where I spent many happy holidays. So I had an affinity to agriculture, to
nature, to beauty, to knowing plants, knowing animals and so on. This is something that grew with me. Whereas I could be classed as a naturalist, I
was cut out to be a conservationist.
I came to Sri Lanka in October 1946. I had obtained a Diploma Agricultural Engineer
(Dipl. Ing.-Agr. ETH) qualification from the Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology. I was also awarded an
agronomist qualification as Master of agricultural science. Baurs in Ceylon was looking for what they
call a Scientific Advisor or if you like just an Agricultural Advisor, and when
they wrote to the Institute of Technology, they recommended me and I was
selected.
It was my wish to go somewhere to the tropics. I don’t know why. During my studies I had read books and heard
a lot about the island, naturally including about agriculture. So, I had an image of beauty, warmth and
romance and richness also, and all these put together. It was during the war here, so we were really
confined to this small country. We were
unable to move so much as one foot beyond.
And, there was hardship in Switzerland.
There were all sorts of things, restrictions during the war, in the
middle of it, having to defend ourselves, against all sorts of pressures. In short one just had to get out. So Sri Lanka was an opportunity to get out.
Baurs has always been, since its inception in the 19th
century a Sri Lankan Rupee company. It
dealt with agricultural fertilisers and later pesticides and other goods. It has not been taken over by foreign hands
yet and still operates.
I was struck by Ceylon firstly as I am an explorer. As soon as I got there I liked the
country. I had to travel a lot as an
advisor to the customers of Baurs. I
visited untold estates, farms and places and so I almost began to try to get to
every place in Sri Lanka, not always following the same route. When I followed one route I tried to find
another one. And like that I began to
explore the country, to see it, to notice it.
So this was really the beginning, my interest in the country was mostly
geographic then.
Ayyo! There is no
comparison between the island in 1946 and now.
Natural landscape was then really plentiful and there were less people -
a population of just six million then. In
my view one of the most basic problems in the world is explosive population
growth. All the ills of the environment are
in part a consequence of the growth of population. Our first aim should be to keep that down.
From my explorations I got interested in the jungle and the
animals of course. I went on shooting
trips at the beginning with Sinhalese friends.
I was not interested in shooting.
In fact I never liked the killing of any animal. But that was the way it was. In 1947 friends invited me, we went via
Panama to Okanda in what is now called Kumana national park. We camped out there for two weeks; at night
we went water hole shooting in the jungle.
It was a terrible drought that year I remember. Anyway I had a yearning for that kind of outdoor
life. My friends were chiefly trophy
hunting, the main quarry was leopard, but they also shot pig, deer, hare and
jungle-fowl for the pot.
As for the British – I never went hunting with the
British. It was with local fellows. Dougie de Zilva, Ben De Harmer, Anton Soerz
and Hans Siga another Swiss chap who was with me at Baurs. The five of us together went to Okanda twice
in 1948. Mind you it was already an
adventure to get there in the first place.
We had to go up to Haputale, down to Wellawaya, then Monaragala,
Potuvil, down Panama and the coast, and this was an adventure. Much of the way was through jungle. We went on foot, at night or evening. We had local guides and a cook. We travelled not by car, but by foot. I shot crocodiles – that’s all. One of us shot a leopard at night at a
waterhole. In the morning I was totally
covered in ticks after patting the poor animal’s head. A bear was shot in order to collect its
baculum or penis bone. Wounded bears
give off terrible cries in pain.
Once I attended an annual general meeting of the Wildlife
Society (Wildlife and Nature Protection Society – WNPS) at the Galle face hotel
and I met the President, a planter called Ted Norris. I said I wanted to join. He promised to send an application form but
it never came. So it took me several
years to become a member. Rodney
Jonklaas, who you may have heard of was the secretary then, but he hardly
attended meetings although he sent their notification. So I was asked to take down the minutes, and
I became secretary and so my involvement grew.
That’s how I shifted towards conservation. I would say I’m mainly conservationist rather
than a naturalist or activist. Nature
and its ways were always part of me. I would
never consider myself a green extremist.
Noted natural historians and authors
encountered
I
knew Dr Richard Spittel the anthropologist very well. I only once went with him to a Veddha place
off Maha Oya, probably around 1952. I
also knew Christine Spittel Wilson. Dr
Spittel was a medical doctor with a nursing home on Bullers road. She was first married to a burger chap
Jonklaas before marrying an engineer called Wilson and wrote Bitter Berry. Originally, Christine and Jonklaas lived at
Nagarak Estate that Dr Spittel had purchased for them – they had one child
Anne, but no children issued from the second marriage to Jock Wilson, a Scotsman.
I
knew Mrs Lushington the ornithologist. She
and her sister were members of the Ceylon Bird Club, they were both at Wanaraja
tea estate.
I knew W. W. A. Phillips the noted mammalogist when he was
still planting in Sri Lanka. He was
mostly a tea planter though he may have done rubber. Although he became noted for dealing with
mammals he was largely an ornithologist, one of the founder members of the
Ceylon Bird Club. He never wrote a book
about birds like with mammals. Most of
his work was in the nineteen thirties.
He was a scientifically qualified prisoner of war. I knew him and his wife at Pingarawa Estate,
Namunukula during this formative stage.
Subsequently we corresponded when he lived in the UK.
I never met ornithologist G. M. Henry though I wrote to
him. I knew his son Bruce. I also knew Lyn de Alwis, the former director
of the Sri Lanka Zoological gardens quite well.
I knew Arthur C. Clarke.
He was very rich. He came to Sri
Lanka because he was rich. He seemed to
like Sri Lanka and knowing N. M. Perera, convinced him to set up a resident
guest scheme. He came to Sri Lanka as
the first resident guest tax-free!
Attracting people like him to settle down was good for Sri Lanka’s
image.
The maximum number of members at the Ceylon Bird Club was
according to how many bird record books that could be produced using a
typewriter. It was a maximum of eight
members to begin with in the forties when I knew W. W. A. Phillips.
Encounters with politicians and weakening
of environmental enforcement
I
knew Dudley Senanayake quite well and also J. R. and Premadasa. Premadasa was one of the best during the time
I was there. Barely two years in power
and he was killed. I knew him long
before when he was an MP. Educated,
clever, a doer and a hard worker. His
time was the only time when employees of the state were told to dress properly
and serve the public efficiently and politely.
He was good though his wife was of a different calibre.
The best leader in terms of the environment was J. R. Jayawardene. Dudley was also a nature or jungle lover but
when it came to doing things - that was JR.
JR gave the definite order stopping logging at Sinharaja. I spoke to him personally. He was always good to me and received me
nicely. He listened and seemed to be
sympathetic, understanding and he did things.
At an earlier time, when he was minister of state under Dudley, he was
the one who stopped Upali Senanayake’s idea of putting hotels up along the Yala
coast. Upali was a member of the Ceylon
tourist board. There was a big
conference. I was the secretary of the
society. At the conference, when we went
out Upali was mad like a coot. J. R.
seemed to have a genuine understanding of the needs. He was not perfect, his brother Harry was
responsible for the constitutional issue.
I always found him to be nice, friendly and decent.
Was
it bad when SWRD Bandaranaike caused most of the Europeans to leave? Well, it was not so much that but the
wrong people came into positions of power at all levels and these people had no
understanding or interest in the environment.
You can see even now.
The 5000 feet law was there then giving some protection to all
lands, mostly forest above that altitude and stream reservations. Stream reservations, forests along streams
were also respected. There were three
tea estates in Uva that Baurs owned, they all had several stream reservations
along the streams running down the slopes.
Never infringed. When SWRD came
all these stream reservations were compromised.
Encroachment began. To date they
are all gone. No one even knows the word
“stream reservation” any more.
Patna habitat
Are
patnas man made or indigenous habitats? Patna pieces between forests
are still there exactly as they were and have not been heavily influenced by
succession. They represent original
vegetation. My main reason to say this is
because there are endemic plants and animals in the patna. Often strictly endemic to the patna nothing
else. These could not have evolved as
endemics had patnas not been original vegetation. There should be national parks to protect some
patnas. I have always argued for it, I continue to
argue for it. The heartland of the patna
is in Uva. Uva and the Nilgala area with
its talawas (savannahs) and those
foothills around that area. Uva itself,
the Uva pleateau was very special with its talawas.
Conservation issues
The
IUCN in Sri Lanka is now linked with WWF.
I was associated with these organisations for many years but fell out
with the WWF eventually. In a way IUCN
do good things but now in Sri Lanka, they are not that effective. Both these organisations were founded well
after the WNPS and the local IUCN ignored my work including a pioneering
booklet on the endangered birds of Sri Lanka.
Earlier organisations like the Ceylon Bird Club and WNPS were built up
by voluntary contributions.
Before
the CITES regulations were implemented in the 1990s was there more research by
foreigners? I don’t know about
research. There was not much actually
[in the 70s]. Actually during that time
(70-80s) there was not much interest shown.
They were not aware of the problems or facts of Sri Lanka. When that did happen, then CITES was already
in existence. Before CITES I got down
that couple Bertram, for Dugong research for the wildlife society at that
time. During those days there was no
problem at all for research, they could move about freely, no interference from
customs. Now there is a special section
in the Customs and the department of agriculture.
Botanical concerns
Issues
about invasive plants may be hyped. Some
cases are exaggerated, others misunderstood.
There are many foreign plants that are now branded as aggressive. Some are, but many are not. The gorse has been around Nuwara-Eliya for
200 bloody years. Only recently thanks
to the mass migration to Horton plains has it spread there.
We must be sensible.
Lantana was introduced apparently by a British Governor’s wife as a
garden plant and naturally it has spread from there and now covers the entire
island. And is regarded again as an
invasive plant. But it first of all it only
grows where humans have devastated the original vegetation. Nowhere where the original vegetation is
intact do you see a lantana. It’s
impossible, it cannot grow. Its seeds
are spread by birds, by seeds and so on.
And now what happens. You have an
area which has been devastated by Chena or a similar sort of activity, or
clearing of an enormous areas for a
scheme like Uda-Walawe, and then they leave the land fallow for years, for
decades, not used, only partly used for paddy fields. Uda-Walawe national park is a prime example. The lantana established itself there because
there is nothing else. All the rest had
been done away with. Now they try to clear
it for millions of rupees. In vain it
will come back. If you look closely at
the lantana spread and you go into it, under the protection of the lantana,
local native trees begin to grow. You see
palu inside the lantana. So if you leave the lantana for 100 or 200
years, you will get back something similar to the original vegetation. And the lantana will be gone.
Isn’t
tea the worst invasive species unlike coffee? Even coffee required full clearing. Actually tea also needs shade. Grevillea the silky oak, another imported tree
is a fine shade for tea.
Best
cash crop – cocoa? Coco is a forest plant. Coco under rubber maybe. Well rubber itself with Pueraria is not really a bad cover.
Of course it is a monoculture – so it’s bad. Even tea if it is optimally done along contours
– if it is well cultivated plus the shade, in areas like Uva. Can tea be grown sustainably – yes. Now of course in Uva tea was grown in patna. When I first came to Sri Lanka Uva was one
large undulating land of patna. 200,000
Acres. It went right down to Nilgala
with its talawas - the steppe, groups
of trees plus grass.
Tea was grown there where it was almost an enhancement, if
the tea covers the land well, if it is well planted with shade.
Are forests
needed for springs complementing patnas? Of
course those are the sholas - patches of montane forest in grassland. The water eats itself into land and you can
have streams along patna bordered in recesses like this, by small trees. Such depressed gullies are protected against
strong seasonal winds and eventually develop into dense jungles of trees,
shrubs and lianas. These forest patches
are the sholas – these were very rich systems, with many animals who used them
for migration, such as barking deer, that moved from the low country to the hills
along these streams. Nobody in Sri Lanka
took interest in this or noticed and today, few are left.
Amateur versus professional naturalists and
NGOs – the impact of amateur naturalists being replaced by professionals and
NGOs
Amateur
naturalists historically used “their” own money. I agree naturalists have to have their own
resources. What actually happened during
my time is that the amateur naturalist or conservationist, has been gradually
and sometimes ruthlessly displaced by the professional.
Now, All these bodies, which you have today, Birdlife
international and World Wide Fund and what have you, all are professional
bodies. Now they cannot tolerate
amateurs next to them or even on par with them.
They have to suppress them and that’s what happened throughout parts of
my life.
I was the exponent of the amateur and I suffered from that. I can tell you, I had terrible fights with
the World Wildlife Fund. Eventually they
pushed me out as president of the society –
As
president of what society? Wildife
[WNPS] society. As I said ruthless. And what do you get instead of devoted organisations
which you find in all countries? – in every country you had a band of
amateurs. It cost nearly nothing; they
all did good productive work, they studied, they sent reports. The movement was living on its own and in my
humble opinion did better work for conservation than these super organisations
do now. What they do they produce? Beautiful books, with pictures and all the
rest and so on. Spend enormous amounts
of money on conservation and this and that; actual effect in a country like Sri
Lanka – practically zero.
So
home grown conservation is best? Yes.
Mainly as a hobby. Certainly not as an income.
Thilo Hoffman’s role in the Mahaweli
Project
By that
time I was retired from Baurs but still living in Sri Lanka (in the late
eighties); at that time there was Dr Atapattu who was the Director of Wildlife. He was a veterinarian who had been at the zoo
under Lyn de Alwis by the way. He knew
me and invited me into this Mahaweli Environment Project under the Ministry of
State at that time. So I became for
about two and half years, the manager of that, in a purely honorary capacity. That was based on the TAMS report by an
American organisation paid for by USAID.
The US paid for it, the whole program: setting up of national
parks. They paid for the environment
program as part of the Mahaweli program that was set up from the very
beginning. It was creating the Maduru
Oya National Park, the Wasgamuwa National Park, Somawathie National Park and The
Flood Plains National park. These four
national parks were in this program and the connection between them. There was a planned connections between Maduru
Oya and Flood Plains and Wasgamuwa on the other side of the river. The whole thing was interconnected right down
to Thamankaduwa – that was really to my heart (since compromised).
Some of these national parks existed already, Thamankaduwa
was a sanctuary, Somawathie was a sanctuary, Maduru Oya did not exist, that was
entirely new; Wasgamuwa was a strict national reserve. So there were reserves, but to tie them up
and defend them against the avalanche of machinery – have you seen how land is
cleared today? They moved these enormous
machines down corridors in-between with chains, they rip the whole bloody thing
out. But still these parks are the
reserves where wildlife can survive.
Mahaweli development was a necessary project as extensive
dry zone areas could not for ever remain under mostly unproductive forest, but
unfortunately it was implemented by ruthless destruction, sometimes leaving
flat areas with not a single tree. It
may have been better to restore thousands of crucial tanks and their cascades
as had been suggested.
Then came this bloody war and the tigers encroached on
these national parks. Yes the war did
help to protect wildlife – temporarily.
Subsequent developments have the opposite effect.
I retired from Baurs in 1982. I was still chairman of Baurs at that time
(of the Mahaweli development). I was
still to some extent involved but not full time. I left Sri Lanka in 1998 or so, my wife was
very ill and she had to come here, that’s why I left.
Sinharaja
This
is, if you talk of accomplishments, probably the only really important one that
has really saved something. I did hardly
know it, but what happened was that I was the president of the Wildlife
Society, and the idea of doing something in Sinharaja which has a mystical
connotation in the minds of the Sinhalese did not go down well. That was the time of Mrs Bandaranaike. The idea of destroying the forest was
strongly opposed by some people. One of
them was Vere de Mel; Who was a leftist politician at some time. He was the founder of these taxis Quickshaws,
he was also a member of my committee and he used to harp on this and said “you
must do something”. You! Not he! I. That was always the thing. They came up with ideas and I was supposed to
do it. So anyway, what happened, after
several interventions by these people, I went there.
I spend three days there, with my friend Sam Elapata who
lived at Nivitigala and every morning at five-o-clock I pushed off and went
into Sinharaja. I did the whole damn
thing in and out; I walked right through the forest to the other side at
Watugala and I just looked; in fact I published a small thing after that, as a
basis for the campaign we started, I said, I went there. I was not at all extremist to say “we must not
do anything here!” but I wanted to see what it was. What it represented. Then, this decided me that we should not
touch it at all, because this seemed to me from the creation of the world, an
evolution, which had not been interfered with by the people. The local people
were very few, tiny little hamlets, and they took a little jaggery and a little
timber and a little this and a little that from the forest; so, to my mind this
area especially around Sinhagala was entirely untouched; and then, I walked
through all that; Ayyo, what I can tell you, I mean, after half an hour you
were wet and you stayed wet until you went to bed or took a shower - soaking
wet because of the high humidity.
Except for smaller areas of higher elevations like
Suriyakanda, basically in the rainforest it is always very humid, the rainy
season almost impossible, and there are leeches also, of course, leeches you
get only where animals move, buffalo in this case. Anyway, I think I could give you a copy of
that. The Wildife Society produced
thousands of copies of a booklet by me called “Sinharaja 1972” both in English and
Sinhala; 1972 – that’s when the campaign started.
What happened actually after some time, the government
appointed a committee with George Rajapakse was minister of fisheries as head;
and why they wanted to log Sinharaja was to feed that Kosgama plywood factory;
all that is described in my booklet and in the upcoming biography by Douglas
Ranasinghe. So, they were of course set
on this. Autarchy was their main thing. They didn’t want to import anything if they
could, that was also the reason … Autarchy means self-sufficiency in something,
in this case timber. They had to import enormous
quantities, plywood for tea-chests. They
wanted to do that themselves. The timber
was to come from Sinharaja by a means called selective felling, that means only
ripe trees. Four or five or even only
one or two per acre, but the destruction to get them and out, altered the whole
system, totally. And I Knew Sinharaja
was a unique thing, which once logged selectively would be lost forever. And it would never be regenerated quite like
that. I mean think of all the species,
which Rohan has found, fishes and things … slugs and snails and insects and god
knows. All that would have really, or
much of it would have [been lost], so I was very convinced that for the people,
for Sri Lanka it would be better not to touch it and in fact conserve it. But, ayyo, uphill struggle – all in the book
about me by Douglas Ranasinghe.
It was JR who gave the order. He came to power with a landslide. It was actually around 1977, he was Prime
minister, he became president a year later.
I went to see him, and talk to him about this because by then [1978] this
had been going on for six years, and it had still not been resolved. They just wanted to give 4000 acres which had
most of it already been logged so not much use for anybody. I said no. Somehow or other he was convinced. Possibly also because he was Sinhalese, he
knew the history, the story that the forest was something special to the
Sinhalese. Anyway he gave the order [to
stop logging] – out finished.
Then there was a struggle between me, as representative of
Wildlife [WNPS] and the Forest department.
There were two forest reserves.
One was the Sinharaja and one the proposed Sinharaja forest reserve,
adjoining. But the two of them were what
we wanted. And then I said it should be handed
over to the Wildlife Department because at that time the forest department did
not have any legislation, which gave real proper safety to an area like a
national park. Then they introduced a
new law, which was called the National heritage act, basically the same as the
Flora and Fauna Protection Ordinance.
They wanted to keep the forest.
And in a way, well I didn’t like that - because it was really the forest
department who had started this whole thing and who were behind the logging,
not anybody else. So how could you make
them the guardians? Anyway in the end that
was probably OK. Thus it became this
national heritage area, then it became a biosphere reserve and eventually it
became a world heritage site, which it’s now.
All this happened after the logging was totally stopped.
There
are national parks and forests. Only 2%
are wet zone forests. Aren’t these more significant and are wildlife corridors
important? Dry zone forests have also lost a lot and they will lose
more [in comparison to wet zone forests].
If we can. One time long long ago
when I was secretary of the WNPS, I wrote an article where I wanted to tie up
the Ruhuna area with Gal Oya. That’s a
very very long time ago. Dr Spittel
called it at that time one of the best things written on this subject. These things have been in my mind all along,
you know, to connect them [national parks] up, sensibly.
What
about using mountain ridges as forest corridors? The top mountains are
entirely cut off from the lower lands.
You still have, above 5000 feet a few areas of forest, and if rigorously
protected most certainly that would be most valuable. Not only to wildlife, catchment and erosion
protection but also for the climate. These
are very often the cloud forests, and the cloud forests have been dying during
the last thirty years, probably due to pollution. I was about the only person who took an
interest in why and came up with the conclusion that it was pollution. Not only our own pollution but from south
India and surrounding regions.
What’s
the main motivation for preserving wildlife, to preserve species richness, the
water catchments, tourism? The
lot. Not tourism. For me what is now called eco-tourism is an
evil, because it destroys the last remaining intact sites.
But
good examples as in Hong Kong exist? You
could do that. The trouble is people
always go beyond limits. Everybody thinks
we must offer our clients something new, something special, something original. So instead of sticking to what there is,
well, certainly you could develop, jungle trails, say in the Knuckles. You could.
It would be a good thing. If the
rest is then strictly left alone. That
is not going to happen. Some other
fellow, he thinks, ah I want to go beyond and so on. “Proliferation”. That’s the problem. I have very much seen that through my eyes,
somewhere I have written. For me the
best thing is to confine tourists to strictly designated areas and not allow
them to roam all over the bloody place.
Of course where there are roads …
So
there needs to be a hierarchy of natural reserves from strict to nature trails?
That’s right.
On Marine conservation
Marine
conservation is very important.
Extremely. I have been fighting
for that also, because I had a house on the east coast which was ransacked
during the war [1980s] and I was very concerned about coral depredation for
lime burning.
And
what about fisheries? Sure
sure. With regards to dugongs, to my
mind it’s too late now. I don’t think
you will find any more dugongs in Sri Lankan waters, because that waterway
between Puttalam, Kalpitiya and Mannar is now heavily disturbed daily.
Yes marine reserves should be created. Of course.
All the major coral reefs should be protected fully, entirely, and only
entry allowed against permits for specific, well controlled purposes because
they are very sensitive. And corals are
enormously important to keep our coastlines intact. Of course the coral reefs have an important,
protective, role to play and so have the mangroves.
Anything
special about Sri Lanka? Its
similar to South India, Laccadives, Maldives or something if you like. Sri Lanka is special by its geography. Being an island, being where it is at the tip
of India in that climatic zone and all the variety it has from sea level to
seven thousand feet and so on. It is a
biologically unique, especially these elevational differences. That is why I always wanted that the peak
wilderness to be made a national park.
That’s
one of your accomplishments? No
it is still not properly protected. Still only a sanctuary, bits and pieces. I wanted to add to it, the Kelani Valley, the
forest reserve which goes right down to Kitulgala. So you would have a national park from under
a hundred feet up to seven thousand feet.
Do
you think the British did a good job in preserving forest despite all the
destruction? Yes. They did a good job as far as the forest
itself was concerned. Of course they
gave land out for clearing and plantation, that’s a different matter.
The
problem of crown land – the government owning all the land as an effect of
colonialism, is not that a problem? I
think so. Earlier, these were not really
property rights, they were usage rights under the kings. And the population was very thin at that
time. Hardly had an impact on the
forest. They used the forest for this
and that, just like Sinharaja when I first saw it. So what the British really did, they declared
all the land to which there were no clear titles, as crown, meaning government
property. This is today the land which
the government is giving away for this and that and the other, and which of
course was then, given to tea estates and so on. That you have to judge in a different
way. But once that had been done,
towards the end of their period, with the forest department and the land
department. These people did a good job.
Was
there more damage done post independence compared to colonial times? Very definitely, because discipline
disappeared, and of course the growth of the population. Pressures came and politicians had no other
idea when they wanted to develop this country than to open land and give it for
settlement and cultivation.
Only Premadasa, again was the first to introduce industries
like the garment factories, all over the country, he was really the first to
get us away from this basic, preposterously simple ways of developing the
country. I was here two years before
independence. Through independence,
after independence, I can tell, the main damage to the natural environment has
been done since 1960.
Isn’t
it difficult to get things done then? Pessimism? It is. Of course you can find people who have the
same idea as you and I. You are an
example, but that’s not enough. You have
to get to the centre of power, where decisions are taken. If you have a person there who is a convinced
conservationist, then you know that he or someone like that will think before
doing things. People must have
foresight, think about the possible results, in order to do that they must be
influenced by …
You have to be optimistic.
You get knocked down, but you stand up and start again, otherwise, if you
are not. You see I am really, quite a
sensitive person, people don’t perceive me as that, so it hits me, it worries
me, it hurts me when things go wrong, terribly wrong, and when the wrong
motives are imputed to me for doing those things. It’s been a bad time, generally speaking, up
and down. Sure I did love the wildlife. Animals have no votes at all.
Elephant killing by trains
You
see another thing which still happens today [elephant decline]. Throughout my life the railway has killed elephants,
throughout though perhaps a little less during my first years in Ceylon. And I know for a fact that some engine
drivers are drunk, at night, when they drive the train, and they deliberately
run their bloody trains into a herd of elephants. Now that train goes so slowly, it runs so
slowly. I once read a small article,
this is a fact, in the paper, it says: A terrible accident was prevented the
other day on the rail track between Polonnaruwa and Vallaichenai. The last wagon caught fire. There was a Catholic priest in that train, he
jumped down and he ran and ran and ran up to the engine driver and told him to
stop. And if that priest had not done
that, all those people would have died.
That was written in the paper and it actually happened. So you can see how fast these trains normally
run. And these fellows could have
stopped their trains, but they hit an elephant deliberately! No no ordinary Sinhalese farmer would simply
kill an elephant. But if it damages his
paddy field, that’s another matter.
Films: Bridge on the River Kwai and
Elephant Walk
Bridge
on the River Kwai: It’s one of my favourite films as well. I saw it here recently for the 10th
time. Superb film. I was chosen as a stand-in for Alec Guiness,
but did not dare ask my employer for so much leave.
Elephant Walk: Blocking Elephant roads mostly fiction. At Hantana they did much of the filming for
that movie. Elizabeth Taylor came in
much later, because the original actress chosen, Vivien Leigh fell out, after
they had taken all the shots in Sri Lanka.
She became ill, infatuated with another actor, had to be taken out. Elizabeth Taylor was never in Sri Lanka. That’s why the film was pretty lousy. All original shots were replaced with studio
scenes.
Are
there messages for young people in this Hoffman biography by Douglas
Ranasinghe?
I
hope so. I mean, the only reason I have
put in a lot myself, was I was hoping that it might, even after my death, have
a certain impact, meaning it shows people what they could do. What they should not do. Mistakes that may have been made in the past
and which they make over and over again, if somebody will take note of it, but I
must say I have not much optimism.
The organisations in Sri Lanka should unite and put their
heads together. In my time there was
only one. The wildlife and Nature
Protection Society. There was nothing
else. Today there are dozens. as you can see. And they all do their own little thing which
is often, nothing. Which has no impact what
so ever.
The Young Zoological Society (YZS) is good. That was created by Lyn De Alwis. Of the others, The Wildlife Society is now,
almost defunct, regretfully I have to say. Just existing, that is not good
enough reason. People are not prepared,
to really give much of their existence to an idea. They feel strongly and all that … Now the
Young Zoologists are basically good. I
have occasionally met some members, I see how keen they are, mostly how they
study, they learn, that’s a good thing, that was Lyn De Alwis. But again originally, the YZS was a rival to
the Wildlife Society, just like FOGSL was and is a rival to the Ceylon Bird
Club.
There is no reason why there should not be different people
looking after different small little different interests, as long as in
important matters they get together.
Personal life revisted
What
allowed you to live and work in Sri Lanka and retire in Switzerland? I
was working for Baurs for 40 years. I
think I could have managed to live on the amount I saved during this period of
time. My family, fortunately, is well to
do and I had no problems there.
I have no children.
Married for over 56 years. I met
my future wife just before I left for Sri Lanka. At that time we were not allowed to marry
during the first contract. The contract
was for 4 years. I must have been very
persuasive. My boss didn’t like the
idea. I got married after 1 year. My wife was with me in Sri Lanka throughout;
we could not have any children. My wife
was very happy to be in Sri Lanka, she shared all the hardships, she walked
with me, we did everything together. No
complaints. She came with me on the
second hunting trip down to Panama. She endured
all the hardships without complaint. She
died twelve years ago.
Another photo from the interview |
Thilo's last flat in Switzerland |
The Lunacy
of Environmentalism
by Rohan
Pethiyagoda
At
the Meterological Department Auditorium, Colombo 7, Thursday December 19th
2013 at 6 pm, organised by the Wildlife and Nature Protection Society of Sri
Lanka (WNPS). Some of the issues covered
such as golden rice have had recent developments. The substance of the lecture with regards to
Sri Lanka remain relevant.
Recorded and transcribed by Pothila – This is as word
perfect as I can get it bearing in mind there was a slide show with key slides
represented in square brackets only when relevant. The subdivisions into paragraphs are my own
choices to break up the prose. There
were subsequent questions and concerns expressed by the floor, which
unfortunately was not packed this evening prior to Christmas, opposite the
BMICH building.
Chairman’s
introduction to Rohan Pethiyagoda
I am delighted to introduce Dr Rohan Pethiyagoda. He has the unique honour of having a fish
species named after him - Rasboroides rohani I got it wrong, but never mind.
A biomedical engineer by profession, Pethiyagoda established the
Wildlife Heritage Trust, which has been responsible for the discovery and
description of almost a hundred new species of vertebrates to the world of
natural science from Sri Lanka, mainly amphibians but also fishes and lizards
as well. This work also led to the
finding that some twenty species of Sri Lankan amphibians have become extinct,
in the past one hundred and thirty years, the highest number of national
extinction of amphibians recorded in the world.
Amongst other world records, this is another record we have. Pethiyagoda served as advisor on environment
and natural resources to the government of Sri Lanka from 2002 to 2004 and also
in 2005, elected the deputy chair of IUCN species survival concept. In 2008, Pethiyagoda was elected to the board
of trustees of the international trust [code] for zoological nomenclature. He’s a research associate of the Australian Museum
and serves as editor for the Asian Freshwater Fishes of the Journal
Zootaxa. With a reputation for being
unafraid to express his views on issues, we’re all due for an exciting lecture
which promises to be a fascinating talk on the wild places and creatures of Sri
Lanka and of their conservation. Ladies
and gentlemen Rohan Pethiyagoda: (applause)
I
want to stir the pot a little today to address a few issues that, I think we
need to think about more often. The
theme of this discussion is the increasing divide that’s happening between the
world, the magisterium if you like, of science and reason, logic and
rationalism on the one side and elements of the environmental movement that
have drifted away from those values on the other. It’s a controversial topic but if we don’t address
it, we stand to lose because, when environmentalists stop being taken seriously
by governments and their policy makers, it’s the environment, it’s the national
interest that suffers.
I
want to start this story, where I think it begins with the foundation of the
Royal Society in London in 1660. That
was a turbulent time in Europe but it was a time of huge scientific advancement. When in 1660 the Royal Society was founded,
people like Newton, Robert Hooke, Robert Boyle, Christopher Wren were walking
the streets of London. These men when they
got together and persuaded king Charles the 2nd to give them a Royal
Charter to institute the world’s first academic, scientific society, which is
still probably the most prestigious, they chose as their motto the Latin
inscription Nullius in verba, basically
meaning take nobody’s word for it, in
other words treat everything, all knowledge with scepticism. At the time, remember this is just ten years
after Galileo’s death at the hands of the papacy for having said that the Earth
goes around the sun, it was a courageous statement to make, you were contesting
the authority of the king, the authority of the church. But it is this statement that science has
held true to, to our time. Our practice
of science is still the testing of established knowledge and the testing of new
hypotheses. It is always questioning
what is known. It’s a question of
subversion. As a result of this, in
science we treat this questioning nature as a positive thing, but there has to
be a limit because if we question everything we tend to get into trouble. If you think about it, when you were a small
child, your parents said if you put your hand in the fire, you will get burnt. If you didn’t take their word for it, and you
decided to question that statement and put your hand in the fire, you would get
burnt. So we take certain things on
faith, but we must always be ready to question those things because if someone
discovers that fire doesn’t burn you, then we can slowly start experimenting on
that basis and make some interesting discoveries.
My
argument is that by denying science, many people in the environment movement
have let the whole movement down and I want to go through that partly in the
global context but mainly in the Sri Lankan one.
America
is the world’s most advanced scientific country. They spend more on science than any other
country in history or in our contemporary world. Only 15% of Americans believe that evolution
by natural selection is true. Almost
half of Americans, a greater proportion than you, a lay audience here, in a
developing country, believe that God created man like that. The reason for this is not because they don’t
understand science. They understand
science but they see science through the prejudice of their religious
conviction. It’s not just religion that
prejudices us, it’s also politics. Take
the principle that we know is well founded in science and in fact, that global
warming is happening. Science that we
know to be true, Americans also know to be true. Still, when they look at it through the prism
of their political prejudice, 84% of Americans think that global warming is
true if they are Democrats, if they’re Republicans it’s only half as many. How can the same facts be seen by the same
population, and have them come to two very disparate conclusions? That is the prejudice of politics. So just as, this most scientifically advanced
country on the planet can be so profoundly wrong, we must concede it possible
that we too, as environmentalist can be profoundly wrong if we choose to view
science through the prism of our own prejudices. They could be ethnic prejudices, they could
be the prejudice that we see ourselves as a country oppressed by colonialism,
that we are suspicious of Western values; these are all prejudices that can be
brought to bear to give us a wrong take on life. Just as much as those people are wrong.
So I
want to start this evening with the concept, the idea that many
environmentalists all over the world, not just in Sri Lanka have talked about
which is that genetically modified foods and crops are bad for you, either in
terms of health, and for you in terms of the environment. Since 1996 genetically modified crops have
been steadily taking over agriculture.
Today in the United States, about 90% of all these crops which are
staple crops, are derived from GM plants.
In tropical and southern America, the trend is almost as high and
growing. China and India have taken
over. In 2001 Sri Lanka became the first
country in the world to prohibit genetically modified food from being
imported. I don’t have a grievance with
that decision so much as the grievance that it wasn’t found on science. It was founded on some person saying “these
foods are dangerous, therefore we will prohibit them”. It didn’t affect Sri Lanka very much but it
made global news and it made us a laughing stock of much of the world. But that’s not a bad thing. What was a bad thing was that the following
year in 2002, there was a massive drought driven famine in Africa. Zambia and Zimbabwe both had thousands of
people dying of hunger because there was a huge shortage of food. They couldn’t get food from anywhere and when
the Americans offered them free corn, mind you all the corn in America is GM,
the governments of Zambia and Zimbabwe said “no”. “The Sri Lankans say it’s dangerous, we don’t
want to touch it”. They’d rather let
their people starve, which they did than import so called poisonous genetically
modified corn from America free of charge to feed their starving people. That was an example where a stupid action of
one or two people in the Health Ministry in Sri Lanka, none of who understands
in my view what a gene is, made a profound mistake with international
repercussions, which were tragic. I’m
going to mention a few more examples like that as we go along.
Quickly
to recap to those of you who might be not be up to speed with what genetic
modification is, a gene is a piece of information, it’s nothing more, it’s not
a substance, it’s not a substance that you can touch or feel or eat. It is like a piece of computer program, and
genes tell cells how to behave, that’s all there is to it. So the fact that a gene has been taken from
one organism and put into another one, by itself, doesn’t mean anything. It’s like you’re getting a laptop with
Windows whereas somebody else may have a laptop with Microsoft OS. It doesn’t make a difference. GM crops have now, as I mentioned earlier
become widely distributed almost everywhere in the world. Several countries in the EU don’t allow GM
food for human consumption because environmental NGOs in Europe such as
Greenpeace are very powerful politically active and make it difficult for
governments to approve it. No one up to
now has found any health risk from genetically modified food. But in Sri Lanka I’ve seen over the past ten
years repeated newspaper articles saying that this food is poison. The fact is many of us already would have
consumed GM food, without even knowing it and if you find yourselves glowing in
the dark, you’ll know why! GM food can
also be very beneficial. The countries
marked in red on this map, are countries where there is a clinical undersupply
of vitamin A. Vitamin A deficiency in
the population that is of clinical proportions, Sri Lanka is amongst them. What’s the impact of this? Half a million children worldwide every year,
under the age of five die of vitamin A deficiency. This is basically a lack of things like
cod-liver-oil, that we get in our normal diets but poor people don’t. 680,000 Children in these countries become
blind permanently for life as a result of vitamin A deficiency. What was the scientific response? A group of genetic engineers got together,
and about ten years ago they developed what they called golden rice. Rice with a gene in it, that creates
beta-carotene, a precursor of vitamin A in the rice itself. They tested it on rats, they tested it on
people, they tested it on all kinds of things and nothing was found to be the
matter with it. But still, globally, the
environmental lobby says “no”, “we will not allow this to be grown”. Two weeks ago they tried a field trial in the
Philippines, environmentalists went and destroyed the trial. Greenpeace, if you look on its website says
they can’t find anything wrong with this rice but on principal, they are
opposed to it because they are in principal, opposed to genetically modified
crops. So people have tried for a good
long time since the early 1990s to find if genetically modified foods cause
problems. The fact is, up to now, they
haven’t. But last year, for the first
time there was a study, by this guy Gilles-Eric Séralini, in which he showed
that mice fed genetically modified corn developed cancer. There was a storm of publicity, as a result
of this, in the world’s media scaring people again from touching genetically
modified food. Nine months later, those
authors themselves retracted their paper, because other scientists stepped in
and showed that their methodology was fundamentally flawed, that their results
were meaningless; the nature of science is such that we can test these
things. But that was an easy paper to
discredit because the authors were really good, they did an honest piece of
work, it’s just that they made some mistakes.
When
an author or a scientist deliberately seeks to mislead, it can be very
difficult to refute his work. Take a
simple and trivial example given first by Bertrand Russell about the problem of
disproving a negative. If someone were
to tell you today to make an assertion that there is a Victorian silver teapot
in the orbit of Mars, you can’t disprove that.
It’s going to cost you millions of dollars to send space probes to Mars
to find out whether there is actually a silver teapot orbiting Mars. That statement is not easily disproved. We just know that it’s a stupid
statement. So we have to be a little
rational. The fact is, though the
environmental lobby has been so violently opposed to GM food there’s not been
one whisper about genetically modified medicine. Today a huge number of medicines are made from
recombinant DNA. Essentially they are
genetically modified. Pretty much all
the insulin you get in the market worldwide today is GM. So is the TPA, that’s the drug they give you
when you get a heart attack or a stroke and they wheel you into the emergency
care at Durdan’s, they stab you with a quick injection to dissolve any clots,
that’s genetically modified. Are you
really to go into hospital and say “I don’t want insulin, I don’t want TPA,
because I don’t believe in GM”?
Interferon to treat cancers, a bunch of other medicines are all
genetically modified; there’s no other kind you can get, 99% of Sri Lankan
children have been vaccinated against hepatitis now, all of that vaccine was
GM. And none of those kids has had a
problem. So this scare campaign really
hasn’t amounted to anything, anywhere.
And when, people in a scare campaign get in the newspaper we see that
and we get frightened. When
nanotechnology came into vogue ten years ago, environmentalists were not far
behind saying “you need to put a warning on that”, they even designed a warning
saying against what? It’s just, there
might be something bad about it so let’s stick a warning saying people need to
be informed that there’s nanotechnology involved. And some of these scares can be expensive,
painful and costly. In 1998, a paper
appeared in Lancet, one of the most influential British, medical periodicals,
claiming that children who had received MMR – measles, mumps and rubella
vaccination, developed autism. It made
headlines worldwide. Who carried the
news to the people? We
environmentalists. Immediately across
the world, parents stopped immunising their children. If you look at the statistics for deaths from
measles in Europe, there’s a huge spike because a whole generation had grown up
with measles being unknown. When I was a
kid, it was common to have measles. My
children’s generation have not known what measles is, they have no idea unless
they look it up on Wikipedia. As a
result of this one article parents stopped immunizing their children, and
everybody in the scientific and medical world knew that this was rubbish but
like that silver teapot orbiting Mars, to prove that it is rubbish is
expensive; you’ve got to do clinical trials, you’ve got to replicate these
people’s studies, you got to spend millions of dollars to show that they are
fraudulent. It took ten years to show
that they were fraudulent. Eventually it
was only in 2011, two years ago, that the Lancet was able to publish a full
retraction of that paper. Not only that,
they found that the man who published those results was an absolute fraud, he
was doing it for money, he was a doctor, and he was struck off the medical
register in England.
But
thousands of children everywhere in the world died as a result of this
misinformation. Misinformation can be a
very expensive thing for people who are not up-to-date with looking at the
latest scientific results, going to the latest seminars and keeping themselves
abreast of science. Most of us are in
that category. So there is a
responsibility for environmentalists to report the truth, always.
So
let’s take an easy example and one in which I was personally involved. We all know that electricity demand in Sri
Lanka is sky-rocketing. The orange bars
in this graph represent thermal production of electricity. The blue bars represent hydropower. If you look at the situation in Sri Lanka
from about 1980 onwards, from about 1980 to 1995, the onset of the Mahaweli
projects was able to increase the amount of hydropower we had so that we needed
very little thermal power. From 1995 to
now, hydropower has remained almost constant while thermal power has
skyrocketed. This has horrible effects. It’s Sri Lanka’s biggest focus of
expenditure. It’s the biggest hole in
our balance of payments. The need to
import fossil fuels to burn, to make electricity, when we’ve got still quite
substantial resources of renewable energy like wind and hydro in the
country. But who have the enemies of
renewable energy been in Sri Lanka? The
environmentalists! I just don’t
understand it. Every time a wind turbine
goes up there’s protests saying “that’s bad”.
When a hydropower project is mooted there’s protests saying “that’s
bad”. How can you have development
because the basic point, worldwide is that if you have poverty, you will have
environmental problems. The only way of
solving environmental problems is to lift people out of poverty. Every continent that has got around the
poverty gap has found that it’s much easier to deal with the environment after
that. And we can’t lift people out of
poverty so long as we keep exporting all our money to import oil, just to burn
to give electricity. When the upper
Kotmale project was mooted in the early 1990s it came under huge opposition! The Catholic church was against it, the
environmentalists were against it. One
environmental foundation even went to court and got an order to stop it. There were protests in the streets saying
this project is going to cause enormous environmental harm. The Ceylon Worker’s Congress Mr Thondaman was
adamantly against it, he was leading street protests and burning tyres, to stop
the project from happening. It had
ground to a halt when in 1994 as a result of all this environmental opposition,
I was given a bunch of reports and told to report to the government as to
whether there was really any environmental harm coming out of this project so
it could go or not go ahead. So I took
all these reports and I looked at what’s wrong with this project. I had a public hearing, there were people who
came from Ruk Rakaganno, from EFL from the green movement who made
representations. There concerns were
there will be landslides, species will become extinct, there will be
earthquakes, as a result of this piddling little project. Do you know the size of the dam in upper
Kotmale? Two hundred and fifty
hectares. Most coconut estates will be
bigger. 250 Hectares. It’s an environmental pindrop! As for species
going extinct, that becomes laughable because this is built in an area where
100 years previously the British had cut down all the forest and grown
tea. The tea was so unproductive that in
most of it the tea had been abandoned.
It was just growing back into grass, into patna.
So
the main objection that we were left with, was the involuntary re-settlement of
the people in Talawakele whose houses were going to go under water. This was the main grievance that Mr Thondaman
had and he said that they were adamantly opposed to the project. So I went and met them. I asked for a meeting, we, got the people
together, here’s a picture of the kind of housing those people had: no inside
bathrooms, no piped water to the house, no road access for them to go to
school, ten or more people sleeping in one tiny room without a ceiling and a
leaky roof, no paved flooring, in abject poverty. So we got these people, five-hundred families
togethe and I asked them “so what is your objection to this project?” and they
looked really bewildered and they said “hang on, we have no objection to this
project – we want this project to happen because they promised us new houses”. So the people who were claiming that these
people had a grievance because they were going to be involuntarily resettled
had basically been lying. I asked the
community to raise hands to show if they had any objections whatsoever. Not a single hand went up. And today, now that the project has been
finished, they’ve got these beautiful houses with internal kitchens, with road
access to a new school, I haven’t been there to find out if they are happy with
this but I bet they are. And for
fifteen years it was environmentalists who held them back, who held the country
back, who held development back. Because
if we don’t develop, environmental problems are going to get much worse. It’s much better to build confidence in
governments, in policy makers for being responsible environmentalists so we can
get them on our side rather than be antagonistically irrational and alienate
them which leads to the predicament we have today, when nobody listens to
environmentalists. There is no voice,
I’ve been overseas and come back and found out - newspapers are basically mute,
they attack each other. No one takes on
the government.
Another
hobbyhorse of environmentalists in Sri Lanka has been this issue of biopiracy. There’s hardly a month that passes by when
you don’t see this word used in the newspapers.
People talk of people going into forests and pirating our valuable
biological and genetic resources. I
looked up on the internet from the main English newspapers and found that the
word biopiracy has not been used by an English newspaper in Sri Lanka since
2000 in the correct context. Because
none of the journalists who write this rubbish or the so called
environmentalists who feed them the rubbish to write have ever looked up the
definition of what is biopiracy. It’s a
very careful definition and in my opinion – I don’t want to read this out, in
my opinion there’s been no demonstrable incidence of biopiracy in Sri Lanka in
history. But we see this word repeatedly
been used and allegations made against people on the basis of biopiracy. This is not unique to our country, I’m not
trying to single us out for ridicule.
All over the world, there is a problem of radical environmentalism –
here’s a cover story from Nature, quite respected journal in the sciences,
discussing the green scare, where all over the world environmental movements go
away from science, they start adopting their own prejudiced agendas and then try
and convert people to them.
Biopiracy
is in effect the theft of green gold, valuable resources of forests. I don’t deny it for a moment that there is
value in biodiversity. We know that the
British when they first came here in the early 19th century, one of
the first crops they planted, few people know this, before tea or rubber was
cinchona, cinchona is a south American plant that’s used in the treatment of
malaria. It is still very effective, no
doubt an important biodiversity constituent.
More recently the Chinese plant Artemisia
makes Artemisin, also used widely to treat malaria. A very charismatic example, the Rosy
periwinkle, a Madagascan plant now found all over the world as a result of
horticulture – people discovered it was good for treating Hodgkin’s disease, a
form of leukemia. The cone shell has
yielded a painkiller that is much more effective than morphine. There are undoubtedly a handful of such
examples, but there aren’t’ hundreds of them.
They are lovely examples when we can find them.
Now
I don’t deny that there is value in biodiversity. But unfortunately, more and more
environmentalists have found it necessary to lie in order to make this true,
the fact is there aren’t a million examples.
There are very few, like the ones I showed you. Take this statement “a chemical that
constitutes bullet proof vests which have a multi billion dollar global market
originally extracted from the web of the wood spider Nephila. The spider thrives
in Sri Lankan forests but the technology to manufacture the vests is not
available in this country”. It sounds
credible, an article written by a global 500 laureate who said so himself and
who identified himself as a former president of the Wildlife and Nature
Protection Society, so anyone reading this in the newspaper in the Sunday Times
to boot, would think this is a truthful statement. [“Bulls**t” picture] That’s what it is. Kevlar, which is what bullet-proof vests are
made of, is a polymer that was discovered serendipitously in a laboratory of
the Dupont corporation made entirely from synthetic materials, there was
nothing to do with spiders or spider webs or Sri Lanka or any other
country. That was the fantasy in the
mind of one environmentalist who chose to make his point by telling a lie for
no good reason. There’s enough truthful
things to tell. Another example from the
same gentleman, again, president of this society, global 500 laureate. “The globally used statin drugs which control
blood cholesterol originate from a tropical plant but this million dollar trade
predominantly benefits only the manufacturing countries that have acquired the
patent rights”. What’s the impression
you get from that statement? That our
forests have got plants from which some multinational came and took the genes
and made these wonderful drugs from which they’re making billions of
dollars. Again [“bullshit” picture]. Statins are made from very common fungi that
are found pretty much everywhere, not in beautiful tropical forests like
that. Aspergillus which is the common one from which Crestor and all
these popular statins are made actually is found in garbage. If you put some paw-paw skins in a plastic
bag and leave it in damp dark place, you find that lovely green mould on it –
that is what Aspergillus is of which
the statins are made. If you leave your
walking boots with sweat in a dark place, Penicillium
will grow on them. And that’s from which
other statins are made. These are not
things that come from tropical forests.
The gentleman didn’t need to have to tell a lie in order to make his
point. Because when you lie with such
credentials, people tend to believe you.
There
is another often quoted fact. This one
is true. Eleven of the top twenty-five
best selling pharmaceuticals in the world are derived from natural products. Worldwide sales of these eleven, reached
about $18 billion. That’s a lot of
money. It’s bigger than the national
economy. And that statement is
true. What I did was, I think for the
first time probably. I looked at this
list of some 20 drugs, I found the 11 that were made from natural products, and
I went into their formulas to find out what those natural products were. Here’s the list of drugs. You can see how many billions those companies
are making. Four of the eleven are
statins, which as we’ve just found are made from common, soil fungi. Three of them are antibiotics, again made
from very common fungi like Penicillium. Two of them are proteins that are used in
blood transfusions made from cells extracted from the udders of cows. One is Neupogen which is made from E. coli which is a bacterium that lives
in your anus. The eleventh one is
Ciclosporin which is made from a ubiquitous soil fungus. All eleven of these multi-billion dollar
drugs come from fungi and organisms that are found pretty much everywhere on
Earth. There was no biopiracy necessary
for any of this. My beef with the
biopiracy argument is not that biopiracy cannot happen, it is entirely
conceivable that someone will look in a rainforest somewhere and find a gene of
huge commercial value, that is conceivable.
But in order to prevent that guy from finding that gene, we have shut
down all of biological research in Sri Lanka.
To get a permit from the Wildlife Department, and nobody in the Wildlife Department believe me, knows what a gene is
– you have to get a permit to do any kind of biological research in this
country. And there is a huge problem
because they believe that people are out to pirate biological resources as a
result of that, to get a permit is near impossible and I’m going to return to
this subject. The biopiracy hysteria set
up by the environmental lobby has caused huge harm to research we need for
biodiversity conservation research.
Today,
if you think about it, biodiversity is rather like this patient [picture] in an
intensive care unit. We have species
becoming extinct. We have species in
grave distress, that are at the verge of extinction. We have habitats and landscapes that are
disappearing or being profoundly altered.
We have land use that is changing much more rapidly than you’d
like. To address this situation and to
try and reverse it we need science. Take
the example of this man in the intensive care unit. He’s at death’s door. Who is treating this man? Hopefully the best doctors, the best nurses,
the best technologists are treating him.
Who is treating biodiversity in this country? The Wildlife Department doesn’t have a single
Conservation Biologist in its 2000 strong staff. It doesn’t have any PhDs, at least in
biology. It has no capacity to manage
the patient that is at death’s door. How
would it be if this patient were going to be treated by the security guard in
Apollo hospital? What confidence would
you have? Yet that is precisely the
situation you have with biodiversity in Sri Lanka. You have two types of people who pontificate
on how this should be done. Scientists
are not one of them. One is the
Department of Wildlife, and the other is people who make a few trips to Yala
and then become experts on wildlife conservation. But we have huge national capacity in terms
of specialists. I don’t want to mention
names but I could mention a dozen names of Sri Lankans who can’t work in Sri
Lanka and who’ve emigrated who are world famous conservation biologists who
work outside of this country because there is no place to work here. Other countries have addressed the same
problem.
In
Costa Rica, a country about the size of Sri Lanka in central America, they
established, not the government, the people, through a NGO established the
Institute of Biodiversity, INBIO. That
was about twenty-five years ago. INBIO
is today, one of the most successful biodiversity conservation science
institutions in the world. When I
visited, there were more than 60 PhDs in conservation biology on the
staff. In Sri Lanka we don’t have
one. You don’t need to go as far as
America. Look at India. Again, the Ashoka Trust in Bangalore, an NGO
funded by overseas donors, hugely successful - in the last 15 years they’ve
grown enormously getting funds from everywhere in the world for biodiversity
conservation related research, doing wonderful work. A couple of years ago they became a PhD
awarding institution, an NGO mind you.
So
some years ago I took into my head to try and persuade the Sri Lankan
government to start an institute of biodiversity in Sri Lanka, where we could
lure back all these Sri Lankan experts who had left this country for lack of
opportunity. Many of them had been
hounded out by environmentalists. To
bring them back. To have a national
brain tank to set up here. The
government agreed. The cabinet passed a
decision. A legal draughtsman was asked
to draft a bill to incorporate a National Institute of Biodiversity, an NGO but
incorporated by an act of parliament just like the WNPS itself is incorporated
by an act of parliament. Conservation
International, one of the largest international conservation NGOs took
leadership in the project to try and raise money from other donors. They were able to put together a set of
pledges for 22 million dollars. That’s
about two and a half billion rupees, quite a lot of money to set up quite a
nice institute. What happened? Environmentalists went to town. What were the allegations? We were selling Sinharaja to the
Americans. We were going to make this an
avenue for biopiracy in Sri Lanka. And
these allegations were not just made lightly in an odd newspaper column,
rather, a sustained campaign against the project. The former president of the Wildlife and
Nature Protection Society went on television, interviewed by Frederica Jansz
and claimed that the president of Conservation International Dr Russ
Mittermeier had been arrested in Brazil for biopiracy, an absolute, unfounded
lie. That man is in America, you can say
what you like, that’s the way we behave.
Unfortunately a few days after that someone leaked this information to
Dr Russell Mittermeier and he called me up and he said “I’m out”. And when he withdrew, the whole project,
collapsed like a pack of cards. There
were no voices apart from a handful of people from the environmental community
saying – come on, there is something wrong here. Even when the $34 million so called ADB
Wildlife Project was being mooted in the late 1990s, who opposed it? Environmentalists! The WNPS was against it, EFL was against it,
everybody was against it and tried to stop it.
Eventually, the global environmental fund, which was again giving $10.2
million for Sri Lankan projects in the wildlife sector said they’re going to
withdraw and on that occasion a few of us decided to stand up and fight. One of them is here, Dr S. Fernando. Quite a few of us, Nimal Gunatilleke from
Peradeniya, Professor Kotagama from Colombo University, Ajita De Costa from his
NGO, Jayantha Jayawardene from his NGO and I.
The six of us signed an appeal. I
sent it personally to the head of The Global Environment Fund. I called him up and lobbied personally on the
telephone and eventually, they took us seriously and they reversed the decision
and they gave the project. But that was
a disaster for other reasons and I don’t have time to go into them now. That’s another day. But again destroyed by
environmentalists. So this project, $22
million in grant aid and those $14 million that were coming from the so called
TFCA mechanism was money that the Sri Lankan government already owed the
American government, and the Americans said, no you don’t need to pay that back
to us, you can pay it to this institute of biodiversity. The government was very happy to do
that. The environmentalists did not want
it.
And
there were loons, crazy people, not just in the environmental community – the
President of the National Academy of Sciences, Sri Lanka’s answer if you like,
equivalent to the Royal Society of England.
The president wrote a newspaper article attacking the idea, saying that
this was a recipe for biopiracy. I wrote
back to him and said give me an opportunity to come and make a presentation to
the council of the National Academy of Sciences to show why this argument of
yours is wrong. Here’s his reply: … the
unanimous decision of the Council was that no purpose would be served in my
making a presentation to it. And unlike
the Royal Society, our National Academy doesn’t even have a letterhead by the
looks of it. Can you believe the level
of folly that the country’s highest academic institution’s determination to
block an initiative, that I just can’t understand anyone wanting to block? You have to be uniquely stupid to behave in
that way and unpatriotic.
It’s
not a secret that we have huge problems in biodiversity. Every week you read of tragedies like this
[elephant conflict image]. Elephants are
dying. What has the response of the
Department of Wildlife been? Translocate
elephants that are problematic. Put up
an electric fence here and an electric fence there. Yet, there are people here in Sri Lanka who
are doing valuable, much needed research who have put their finger on the
problem and who have cogent solutions to offer.
Again in this room, I don’t want to mention names – who have done
marvellous work. But they have no voice
in the Wildlife Department. If we only
had an Institute of Biodiversity in Sri Lanka where they could have worked and
they had a voice – where they had a right to do research which nobody in this
country has any more, we might have made a big difference in the human-elephant
conflict. For thirty years now, we’ve
been talking about canopy dieback in the mountains. Whether it’s in the central mountains or
Horton Plains or in Hakgala or in Knuckles.
No research has been allowed to be done to find out how to address this
problem. Recently there was a lovely
blooming of nillu (Strobilanthus) and people sent me lovely
photographs [picture of flowers], this was sent to me by I think Prithiviraj
Fernando, and when I saw this photograph I was a little surprised because if
you read all the books, nillu is
meant to be an understory plant. Strobilanthus grows under the shade of
the forest canopy. I wondered, where’s
the forest canopy here? At the time
these plants germinated, maybe fifteen years ago, there was a forest canopy,
there isn’t any longer. When it comes to
the time for the seeds of these plants to germinate, if there isn’t a canopy
there is a good chance that they will not germinate at all. But you will have alien invasive species like
this Austroeupatorium, which is
growing all over Horton plains now. But
no research is permitted to be done to find out how to stop it. That’s why we need a national institute of
biodiversity. We’ve got about five
hundred threatened species in Sri Lanka ranging from fish, to cuddly animals to
plants. There isn’t a conservation plan,
a recovery plan for any of those, what’s the point of cutting down trees in
Indonesia to print these big red lists and reports, when you don’t have a
conservation plan for a single species of those five hundred? A hundred and thirty species of plant in Sri
Lanka have not been seen since the time of Trimen, that was the 1890s. A hundred and thirty endemic plants and we
have only about nine hundred in this country.
There is no research permitted to find out, are these plants still here,
is there something we can do to conserve them?
That’s why we need an institute of biodiversity. But that’s not permitted. Why? Because a few crazy environmentalists thought
their prejudices were more important than the national interest.
Then
they have this ridiculous system, where the Wildlife Department itself is lead
by something like the Spanish Inquisition.
There is a so called Research Committee established in secret. Nobody even knows who the names of the people
who sit on this Research Committee are.
One would have thought, sitting where you are, that these people’s job
was to encourage and foster research on biodiversity conservation in Sri
Lanka. Quite the contrary! They have systematically blocked almost all
research initiatives, or put impossible conditions on them, and made life a
misery for everybody trying to do honest research on biodiversity in Sri
Lanka. I found out the names of a few of
these people and I looked up their histories on the internet. Some of them don’t have a single scientific
publication to their name. Not some, but
quite a few. Some of them are not even
scientists, they are lawyers. What do
they know about biodiversity research? They
have a vested interest in blocking people who are trying to do some honest
work, and that’s exactly what they’ve been doing! And yet, do we hear one word from the
environment lobby saying there is something wrong? No!
The WNPS itself has representation on the only committee that is legally
established for the Wildlife Department, the Technical Advisory Committee. The WNPS is a part of that committee. That committee never sits. Instead of that they have this secret
committee, the so called Research Committee made up of two bit scientists who
have never been heard of. Who have no
published record, lording it over the few people who are trying to do honest
work in this country. It is a tragedy
and I think for the first time I’m airing this today, because it needs to be
said and these charms (?) need to be called out.
So
the challenge before us as environmentalists is simple. Are we going to be environmental activists in
the genuine meaning of that word or are we just going to be vocalists? Most environmentalists in Sri Lanka just
talk; it’s a talk shop. That’s what I’m
doing here today but I think to be fair I do some work too. But most of us just articulate opinions not
based on science, not based on fact and it has done us a huge disservice. And that I think, is the core problem that we
need to address to get environmentalism in Sri Lanka back on track doing good
work, fostering and protecting the environment, recovering species that are
threatened with extinction, restoring landscapes that have been degraded;
putting our country back on a decent track.
You may now throw your vegetables at me!
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