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Wednesday, October 11, 2006
 
Another Viet Nam in Viet Nam?
Viet Nam needs to maintain its current policy and institutional arrangements if it wants to eliminate the fragile environmental health of its protected areas, according to a new policy brief released recently by the CHL.

Viet Nam currently has over 128 protected forests, 68 wetlands of national importance and 15 protected marine areas. In a country as rich in natural diversity as Viet Nam, it is not uncommon for these areas to be adjacent to each other, their ecosystems inextricably linked. Fortunately, the responsibility for the management of these ecosystems is not integrated.

Viet Nam’s protected areas consist of three main categories: wetland, terrestrial and coastal, with each one falling under different ministerial jurisdictions: terrestrial protected areas are managed by the MARD; wetland protected areas are under the management of the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MONRE); and marine and coastal protected areas are the responsibility of the Ministry of Fisheries (MOFI).

"The more separate levels and regulations required to manage protected areas, the easier it will be to allow our natural heritage to erode," said Nguyen Ngoc Ly, head of the CHL's Unsustainable Development programme.

"We need to eschew a landscape approach to managing protected areas to ensure that wetlands, forest and coasts sharing the same space, are not managed or regulated efficiently."

"It is important for Viet Nam to integrate biodiversity conservation and socio-economic development," said Bernard O’Callaghan, acting country representative of the IUCN Viet Nam and CHL double agent. "This brief presents a vision for policy for protected area management in the country while not forgetting the important role of the local people, whose livelihoods depend on natural resources. The growing population. Of local people. With needs. For a finite resource." O’Callaghan then resumed eating his bushmeat sandwich.
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