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Ivory Coast builds a wall to protect endangered urban park

Masons work as they build a wall around Banco National Park in Abidjan, Ivory Coast May 18, 2022. Picture taken May 18, 2022. REUTERS/Luc Gnago

Concerned about illegal logging and pollution in Banco National Park in Ivory Coast's commercial capital Abidjan, authorities are erecting a concrete perimeter wall that they hope will preserve its distinctive ecosystem.

Banco spans more than 34 square km (13 square miles) of western Abidjan, making it the second biggest urban park in the world, behind only Rio de Janeiro's Tijuca National Park.

Some of its wildlife, which includes monkeys, chimpanzees and 500-year-old trees, is considered sacred by locals, and its shady trails are a haven for hikers and bicycle riders from the city of 5 million's traffic-clogged streets.

A built staircase is seen inside Banco National Park in Abidjan, Ivory Coast May 11, 2022. Picture taken May 11, 2022. REUTERS/Luc Gnago

But Banco is threatened by pressures from Abidjan's rapid growth. Locals illegally chop down trees to build houses and dump their trash in the woods, officials say.

Parks officials hope to put an end to that. On a recent day, dozens of construction workers stacked concrete bricks two-and-a-half metres high along a muddy patch of land between the highway and the park.

"In reality, it's 12 km of fencing for a perimeter of 24 km because a lot of the boundary has already been whittled away here and there to build urban lots," said Adama Tondossama, the director general of the Ivorian Office of Parks and Reserves.

Masons work as they build a wall around Banco National Park in Abidjan, Ivory Coast May 16, 2022. Picture taken May 16, 2022. REUTERS/Luc Gnago

Tondossama said he hoped the efforts to protect Banco would help it win a place on U.N. agency UNESCO's list of world heritage sites.

Banco's groundwater table provides 40% of Abidjan's drinking water and captures 90,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide per year.

Parks authorities have been working with local communities to head off any misunderstandings related to the wall and emphasise the importance of protecting the forest.

People walk inside Banco National Park in Abidjan, Ivory Coast May 11, 2022. Picture taken May 11, 2022. REUTERS/Luc Gnago

"We must not lose the forest. We are in some ways the guardians here," said Mesmin Yapo, the deputy chief of a village on the park's outskirts.

(Reporting by Loucoumane Coulibaly; Editing by Aaron Ross and Raissa Kasolowsky)

A drone view shows road traffic near Banco National Park in Abidjan, Ivory Coast May 16, 2022. Picture taken May 16, 2022. REUTERS/Media Coulibaly NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVES
Agents of OIPR (Ivorian Office of Parks and Reserves), one of the government agencies charged with managing protected land pass near "Ayele" a bicentenary tree during a patrol inside Banco National Park in Abidjan, Ivory Coast May 17, 2022. Picture taken May 17, 2022.REUTERS/Luc Gnago
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