Prince Harry’s African charity admits that rainforest families say their ranger was raped and defeated the tribe

Prince Harry’s African Wildlife Charity partially acknowledged that the abuse of human rights was carried out by its own rangers in the event of public atrocities following an explosive investigation by Sunday’s email.
Prince Harry is said to have served as president of Africa Park for six years until he was promoted to the board of directors two years ago, and he is said to be fully aware of the scandal and has been involved in changing the issues to resolve them.
His Sentinel charity swallowed up another blow from the Duke of Sussex after his Sentinel charity resigned from the board, and its chairman Sophie Chandauka accused Harry of “mass harassment and bullying” – a claim that was denied.
Last year, Sunday’s email investigation found evidence of intimidation and abuse in the rainforest of the Republic of Congo, managed and paid by African Park charities, including rape and assault charges.
MOS discovered first-hand testimony of the atrocities caused by indigenous peoples once known as pygmies to prevent them from entering the forest where they have forage, fishing, hunting and discovering drugs for thousands of years.
A woman told her that she was raped by armed guards while insisting on a new baby. A teenage boy claimed he was paid for by another guard.
A Baka man died after being beaten and jailed after being injured, a community activist said.
Prince Harry served as president of the charity for six years until he was promoted to the board of directors in 2023. He is said to have been fully involved in the plan to change the charity.

Ella Ene and son Daniel. She told the email on Sunday how she was allegedly raped by African Park defenders
Africa Park subsequently initiated an independent review, and the charity now acknowledges that human rights violations have occurred in Odzala-kokoua National Park since December 2023.
The findings of the London law firm Omnia Strategy LLP have disappeared directly Go to the African Park.
The charity said in a statement: “The African Parks Commission reviewed Omnia’s recommendations and endorsed the management plan and timeline to implement the recommendations arising from this process.
Africa Park acknowledges that in some cases there have been human rights violations and we deeply regret the pain and suffering that has been caused to the victims.
“Omnia’s process also highlights several failures of our systems and processes that are not sufficient to assume our level of responsibility to us, especially in the early stages of our management of Odzala.”

Sunday reporter Ian Birrell and two Baka people say they were beaten
Omnia said its investigation was “unexhausted and thorough and proportionate”.
However, the anger discovery has not been made public.
International support for survival of indigenous peoples has reportedly increased abuse Prince Harry’s Baka people.
Director Caroline Pearce said: “We still don’t know the details they found because African Parks refuse to allow the findings to be made public.
“It has been committed to more reports, more staff and more guidance, but this approach has not prevented violations and violations of international human rights law in the decade or more known to the atrocities in African Parks, and there is no reason to believe they will do so now.”
African Park was shocked by the scandal in January 2024, when Sunday’s emails traveled to Congo and discovered the terrifying abuse of its guards.
It was late at night when young mother Ella Ene was suddenly awakened by someone knocking her house.
She thought it was her husband’s return from a nearby village – but it was a guard from the African Parks conservation charity, asking her to get up immediately and follow him.
“The guy was wearing a uniform and holding a gun,” Ella Ene said. “He was threatening me, saying “I’ll shoot,” if I didn’t do it like he said. He told me he wanted to take me to their camp.
She tied up her baby Daniel – a month old, too young to be at home – following the African Park defender on a ten-minute walk.
With cruel but brave honesty, she describes what happened next and how the man raped her next to her when she was afraid of her child. She said the guards ordered her to reach the ground, tear off some clothes and beat her on the black night, ignoring her screams and the baby’s crying.
“I held my child while I was raped and trying to protect him.” “My first reaction was to protect my child. This is very violent.

Baka community lives in one of the African park areas
The rapidly expanding charity has partnered with the government to manage a large number of forests and national parks in 12 African countries and boast about saving wildlife through working with local communities.
A man claimed that his head was forced to cuff underwater and his back was repeatedly whipped with a belt, saying: “Some guards are bad people and their activities should be stopped. What they are doing is cruel and inhumane.
A community activist told MOS that a Baka man died after being beaten and jailed after being beaten for injuries.
A woman told her that she was raped by armed guards while insisting on a new baby.
A teenage boy claimed he was paid for by another guard. There are claims that medical staff were intimidated to cover up abuse.
The raped mother also said she has not received a majority of the £1,300 compensation from the court orders the attacker to pay after a brief jail.
The disturbing revelation is because Prince Harry promotes his global mission as an equal social justice campaigner and fighter.
A weekend of the mail surveyed Sunday emerged, and his leadership role at African Parks was awarded the Aviation Legend Award for “Humanitarian, Military Veterans and Mental Health Advocates” at a ceremony in Los Angeles.
Citation praised him as an “environmentalist” saying he’s dedicated his life to propel his career that is passionate about him and brings permanent changes to people and places, including African parks.
But a Baka man said he witnessed the brutal attacks by the African Park Guard told MOS that he hoped Harry would use his power to intervene to “stop the pain and pain that has been caused to our community.”
Harry said Africa is where “I feel more like myself than anywhere else in the world”, and about eight years ago he was appointed president of the charity, while on the guest editor’s BBC Radio 4 Today Today program.
His involvement began with a trip to Malawi assisting the elephant project in 2016, and his role changed when he joined the charity board last fall.
“What I see in the African Park model is exactly what conservation means – making people at the heart of the solution,” he said. “Conservation can only be maintained when people closest to nature invest in their preservation.”

Odzala-Kokoua National Park has over 400 species of birds, 110 species of mammals and at least 4,400 species of plant species
When we submitted the findings to his foundation spokesman Harry, said: “When the Duke realized these serious allegations, he immediately escalated them to the CEO and chairman of the African Parks Board of Directors, which is the right person to handle the next step.”
Harry was warned in a letter from a campaign group for the rights of indigenous peoples in May 2023 that his rangers committed “shocking human rights violations.”
“The scale and quantity of violent intimidation and torture clearly shows that this is not an abnormal behavior by some people,” the letter said. It called on the prince to “use your influence and location to stop these abuses committed by the organizations you lend your name” and was given a direct video call from the Baka tribes’ direct appeal to Harry and Meghan.
The Baka community lives in Odzala-Kokoua National Park, a rainforest area where gorillas and forest elephants are located.
A Baka man said: “The forest is left to us by our parents and ancestors. Everything we have is found in the forest – our food, our medicine. Without it, we suffer a lot. They are destroying our heritage and our people.
The park has been managed by African parks since signing a 25-year contract with the Congolese government in 2010.
The charity is funded by the EU, the US and wealthy philanthropists. It has received UK aid since 2015 and the Edinburgh-based People’s Post Lottery has been handed over £8.2 million.