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About GRASP
Current Priorities  

Moses Mapesa, the Chair of the First GRASP Council Meeting

The GRASP Secretariat, under the guidance of the GRASP Executive Committee and Scientific Commission, will facilitate the GRASP Partnership to undertake the following priority activities in the 2005-2007 timeframe.

1. High-level national and intergovernmental dialogue to generate political will and influence policy for great ape conservation globally.

Priority 1a – to promote international dialogue on great ape conservation at the highest levels among donor and range state governments, institutions and other stakeholders.

Priority 1b – to strengthen collaboration with the relevant biodiversity-related multilateral environmental agreements, including CITES, CMS, WHC, CBD and Ramsar.

Priority 1c – to engage intergovernmental bodies (NEPAD, AMCEN, European Union, ASEAN, etc), international financial institutions (World Bank, IMF, Export Credit Agencies, etc), other relevant multilateral organizations (ITTO, ATO, etc) and UN agencies to include biodiversity conservation, with a particular emphasis on great apes, as a key factor in establishing programme priorities at the national, regional and international levels.

UNEP Deputy Executive Director, Shafqat Kakakhel at the GRASP launch

2. Planning and monitoring at the national, regional and international levels to help bring the decline of great ape populations to a halt.

Priority 2a – to identify priority populations of great apes for conservation and to formulate and begin the implementation of detailed national, regional and international conservation plans for all high-priority populations.

Priority 2b – to design and initiate a system for monitoring and evaluating the effectiveness of great ape conservation efforts at national, regional and international levels.

Priority 2c – to work with range state governments to facilitate and assist in the development of national policies to advance the conservation of great apes.

3. Development and promotion of best practices, cooperation and technical support between stakeholders.

Priority 3a – to promote greater cooperation and communication between all stakeholders (including local communities) in governance and priority setting for great ape conservation, through such activities as the:

Provision of technical and other support to range state authorities to increase capacity to manage great ape populations and their habitat sustainably

Organization of regional and other law enforcement training activities and workshops for relevant officials and experts to address illegal trade and resource extraction issues.

Priority 3b – to develop and replicate best practices to address common threats facing the great apes, with a focus on special projects such as:

(i) Joint initiatives to address deforestation and habitat loss involving governments and representatives of extractive (timber, oil, mining) and forest conversion (plantations, palm oil) industries, with a particular focus on Central Africa and Southeast Asia in cooperation with national ministries, the private sector and multilateral institutions

(ii) Those that identify and implement effective and adaptable common approaches to unresolved issues such as the bushmeat crisis and interspecies disease transmission

(iii) Other pilot projects in key fields where the UN-led GRASP Partnership has a competitive advantage such as those with transboundary collaboration, peace-building and integrated conservation and sustainable development opportunities.

4. Media, information and public awareness to mitigate the threats facing the great apes.

Priority 4a – to initiate and facilitate interested GRASP Partners to undertake a locally-adapted great ape public information and awareness raising conservation education campaign in priority regions of the African and south-east Asia great ape range states.

Priority 4b – to increase current efforts to present great ape information to key decision makers and staff in relevant national, intergovernmental and donor institutions, the United Nations system and the corporate sector, including dissemination through the media.

5. New and additional funding for great ape conservation.

Priority 5a – to raise new and additional funding to achieve the preceding priority actions for great ape conservation from donor governments, intergovernmental and multilateral bodies and large corporate sponsors.