Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 01 March 2026
📘 Source: Cape Argus

Cape authorities have adopted a five-year baboon action plan outlining relocations, fencing and population caps, while concerns over census data and governance have been raised with the Public Protector. Image:FILE picture: Henk Kruger/African News Agency The Cape Peninsula Baboon Management Joint Task Team (CPBMJTT) have formally adopted a detailed action plan to implement the Cape Peninsula Baboon Strategic Management Plan, outlining how baboon populations will be managed over the next five years. Authorities say the strategy follows years of escalating urban incursions, infrastructure damage, safety concerns and rising management costs.

The plan seeks to create clearer boundaries between urban areas and baboon habitat while maintaining viable troops within conservation areas. Among the key interventions is the relocation of certain troops to a newly established baboon sanctuary on privately owned land on Plateau Road. According to the plan, the Seaforth troop is scheduled for relocation by February 2026.

Baboons will be captured, undergo veterinary health assessments and healthy males will be vasectomised before being released into a purpose-built 1.5-hectare trial enclosure. The site will be assessed within six months to determine feasibility before any expansion is considered. The Waterfall troop is expected to be relocated later in 2026, subject to the outcome of the Seaforth relocation and completion of further enclosures.

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The CT1 and CT2 troops are to be released on the mountain side of the fence south of Constantia Nek following welfare assessments. The plan provides that any baboon, apart from dispersing males, that breaches the northern fence line may be humanely euthanised in accordance with approved management protocols. A semi-contiguous baboon-proof fence from Zwaanswyk to Constantia Nek is expected to be completed by July 2026.

Authorities have stated that no baboons will be permitted north of the fence line and that rangers will patrol and maintain the barrier. The plan further states that regular urban incursions will not be tolerated, with “hard boundaries” and aversion tools to be used to reduce habituation to human spaces. “The Action Plan will be regularly reviewed to ensure the actions, assessments, and outcomes are in line with regulatory requirements, strategic direction, emerging trends, and new knowledge.

The next formal review will take place in 2030,” said the Task team. The action plan sets a maximum sub-population of 250 for northern troops and 175 for southern troops, excluding deep Cape Point troops. Current estimates cited in the plan place northern troops at 234 and southern troops at 164.

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📰 Article Attribution
Originally published by Cape Argus • March 01, 2026

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