Showing posts with label Wilderness Safaris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wilderness Safaris. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 June 2024

Botswana: Wilderness Safaris Tubu Tree and Little Tubu

Wilderness Safaris news

We’re thrilled to announce that completely rebuilt Wilderness Tubu Tree and Little Tubu officially reopened on 15 June, just in time for prime game-viewing season in the Okavango Delta.

Set on The Jao Reserve’s famed Hunda Island, the Wilderness Tubu camps overlook spectacular Okavango Delta floodplains. One of the largest areas of dry land in the area, game concentrates on this pristine tract of land, followed closely by an abundance of predators. Recent wildlife sightings during the final stages of the rebuild have been plentiful as ever; leopards lounging in fig trees, lions crossing channels with cubs in tow and hunting buffalo on the plains.

While still honouring their heritage and exquisite natural surrounds, the newly rebuilt camps have been elegantly upgraded; modern guest rooms have been decorated with a palette inspired by the earthy tones and textures of Hunda Island, showcasing horizon-wide views of the wildlife-rich floodplains.

Purchase photo/4K video: portfolio1 portfolio2
Aerial photo/video service/inquiries: info@traveltonamibia.com
Telegram: ExploringNamibia

Friday, 1 January 2021

Namibia: Ongava Camps Opening Date | Онгава Намибия

Ongava Camps Opening Date

Warm Greetings from Namibia, I hope this missive finds you in good health and spirits? After such a tumultuous year we would like to say thank you very much for your understanding and support as we navigated through the various trials and tribulations. The wonderful vaccines news, and taking cognisance of Guest and Agent feedback, we have a firm announcement of Ongava’s re-opening:

The Ongava camps re-open on Tuesday June 1st, 2021.

It follows that Ongava hospitality operations closure, previously April through December 2020, is extended to Monday May 31st, 2021. We sincerely regret the inconvenience for Guests affected. Ongava Reservations will be in contact with you for bookings affected by Ongava closure. Affected Guests are encouraged to select new dates with our no-fee change / no annual rate increase offer through to 31st December 2022, or, cancel, and be fully refunded.

The 2020 Coronavirus experience shows the seasonal decrease in northern hemisphere infection rates in summer, coupled with the roll out of immunisation programs. Based on this we believe mid-2021 will see safe travel commencing at scale. Please see below for more details on how we anticipate this to develop.

To further emphasise and mark the Ongava re-opening of hospitality we are extending two great Specials:

° in recognition of their selfless commitment and courage all bona fide Frontline Healthcare workers qualify for a full -35% off Ongava Recommended Rate up to 31 December 2022.

° the Ongava Long Stay Special - less 25% for bookings from four days and more - will also be available through High Season 2021.

For nature's sake

We are savouring the spectacular news on vaccine advances - thank you science. Now for the next mighty challenge - to achieve production, logistics and immunization at global scale will take years. That puts the pandemic end date around 2025 or longer. Or never if anti-vaxxers get their way.

The trickle of pilgrims and domestic visitors now braving the risks and travelling is currently insufficient to pay the rent for nature tourism. In the absence of safe travel at scale the failure of nature based tourism will be severe. Natural habitat will succumb to the cow and the plough. Decades of conservation successes are staring into the abyss of permanent failure. The rollback of conservation estate will be immense. And permanent. Appetite for global donations will become harder to stimulate as developed world nations look increasingly inward to address their internal challenges brought on by the pandemic destruction. With most community and conservation projects now running on charitable donations the prospects are dim. Nature based tourism may not survive another year. Never mind five or more years until herd immunity is judged to be sufficient to end the pandemic.

What are the options to create safe travel conditions at scale? Will Switzerland based non-profit CommonPass in partnership with The World Economic Forum and backing from The Rockefeller Foundation already engaged with 140 countries offer a system for safe travel at scale during the pandemic?

If CommonPass, and similar systems, succeed then economies, airlines, travel agents, hotels and lodges and their myriad support services will have a chance of survival.

We believe the Digital Health Passports will instill confidence in travellers and in the national authorities - as negative COVID-19 tests will become much harder to fake with digital technology that verifies the test with registered and certified pathology labs.

As the systems gain traction we believe that Digital Health Passports will enable safe travel at scale by mid-2021.

Irina, we encourage you to familiarize yourself with the Digital Health Passports and please use every opportunity to advocate for this technology among your friends, family, social and business network.

Safe travel at scale

For safe travel to resume at scale requires Health Bubbles / Safe Corridors / Vaccine Tunnels. Several major airlines will soon use a digital platform to assess passenger Covid-19 status; “The Commons Project, The World Economic Forum and a broad coalition of public and private partners are collaborating to launch CommonPass, a trusted, globally-interoperable platform for people to document their COVID-19 status (health declarations / PCR tests / vaccinations) to satisfy country entry requirements, while protecting their health data privacy.”

“JetBlue, Lufthansa, Swiss International Airlines, United Airlines, and Virgin Atlantic will begin the roll-out of CommonPass in December on select flights departing from New York, Boston, London, and Hong Kong.”

About CommonPass

CommonPass allows a safer return to work, school, travel and life by enabling you to share your health/vaccine status while protecting your data & privacy.

For global travel and trade to return to pre-pandemic levels, travelers will need a secure and verifiable way to document their health status as they travel and cross borders. Countries will need to be able to trust that a traveller’s record of a COVID PCR test or vaccination administered in another country is valid. Countries will also need the flexibility to update their health screening entry requirements as the pandemic evolves and science progresses. Airlines, airports and other travel industry stakeholders will need the same. The Commons Project together with The World Economic Forum is working to initiate the CommonPass framework to address those challenges.

CommonPass is not a contract tracing app and does not collect location information on its users, except for when explicitly granted by the user. In addition to being GDPR compliant, CommonPass allows individuals to control who has access to their data and when. At any time, an individual can remove their personal data from the CommonPass app. 

How it works

The CommonPass framework will allow individuals to access their lab results and vaccination records, and consent to have that information used to validate their COVID status without revealing any other underlying personal health information. Lab results and vaccination records can be accessed through existing health data systems, national or local registries or personal digital health records (Apple Health for iOS, CommonHealth for Android). Apple Health and CommonHealth let individuals store their health records securely and privately on their phones, entirely under their control.

The framework will assess whether the individual’s lab test results or vaccination records (1) come from a trusted source, and (2) satisfy the health screening requirements of the country they want to enter. The framework delivers a simple yes/no answer as to whether the individual meets the current entry criteria, but the underlying health information stays in the individual’s control. The framework is being designed such that it can be accessed directly through other apps and services.

CommonPass media and resources

STAT, reporting from the frontiers of health and medicine CommonHealth, the Android answer to Apple Health Records, expands to 230 health systems December 4, 2020

Travel Weekly, UK: Trials of Switzerland based CommonPass have started positively

Eyewitness News, ABC7, USA: Group works to return international air travel to normal

Forbes, USA: Some Air Passengers Are Faking Negative Covid-19 Test Results, Per U.K. Reports.

Safe, unrestricted travel

Our sympathies to those who are suffering. And who have lost loved ones. We wish you good health while we wait – with great anticipation – for safe, unrestricted travel.

As always please feel free to contact us at any time if you have any questions.

Kind Regards

Rob Moffett

Ongava Game Reserve

Purchase photo/4K video: portfolio1 portfolio2
Aerial photo/video service/inquiries: info@traveltonamibia.com

Thursday, 31 December 2020

Namibia: Reopening of Ongava Game Reserve | Онгава Намибия

People at the center of conservation at Ongava

Namibia's well-entrenched Parks and People policies empower communities to sustainably utilise their ancestral land. The enlightened approach has lead to upwards of half of Namibia's land surface area achieving one or other degree of conservation status. Of which approximately 17% of our country's conservation estate is the proclaimed protected areas such as the giant Namib-Naukluft and Etosha National Parks.

The nation's Community-based Natural Resource Management (CBNRM) legislation make provision for communities to form legally recognised entities that have rights to sustainably utilise their natural resources (the legal terminology: they are granted usufruct).

For National Parks, in the absence of a resident community, the immediate neighbouring Community qualifies as "the resident Community". The original inhabitants of the Etosha region are the Hai//om Community, of which the last of the free-living Hai//om "San Bushman" of Etosha were corralled 65 years ago. As their freedoms reduced they experienced increasing socio-economic marginalisation.

The democratically elected government of Namibia began to make reparations for this injustice including the award of a significant expanse of the south-central portion of the Etosha National Park, and related resettlement farms along the southern boundary have been acquired, to form a remedial project to develop a sustainable range of benefits for the dispossessed community upon their ancestral land.

Following state resource tender procedures the Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism supported the Community in identifying a private sector investor and operator. Of the proposals submitted during the formal RFP we at Ongava, together with our empowerment partners, are delighted to be selected as the preferred bidder by the !Gobaub Association, representing the Hai//om Community.

Nature First is the singular focus that guides Ongava. The intention of the Ongava impact investment is to provide diverse upliftment opportunities for the rural community, opportunities that will empower the community to command agency over their destiny in a sustainable manner. Here’s a fun overview:

The Ongava Hai//om joint venture 

Community-based Natural Resource Management in Namibia

The legendary conservationist Ian Player was the first to articulate, using the allegory of a three-legged traditional cooking pot, that successful conservation requires three pillars to be in harmony - Conservation, Commerce and Community. We couldn't think of a more relevant Community than our neighbours - the Hai//om - to embark on this ambitious rewilding, renewal and reintroduction project.

Adventure beckons! ELENA, we look forward to sharing this vital journey with you. Meet our Partners, the Hai//om (pronounced “Hi Com”, "//" denotes a click in the middle):

We are the Rhino Shepherds

Ongava Camps closure April 2020 - May 2021

To matters at hand - for many years our business has been built on warm hospitality and memorable wildlife experiences, which is at odds with social distancing. Our focus is on the well-being of our families, our colleagues and our fellow citizens and - as previously communicated - Ongava hospitality operations remain suspended up to May 31st, 2021.

Ongava is an enclave of calm where nature can go about its business unhindered – young impala rams play-fighting, a bumblebee busily pollinating an acacia blossom, a ground squirrel balancing on his hind limbs surveying his harem. A pride of tawny beasts, pads puffing dust, seek shade. Francolins fuss, a cicada heralds the blazing midday heat.

Opening Specials

Ongava hospitality reopens on Tuesday June 1st, 2021 with fantastic Specials for frontline health care workers and long stay guests:

In recognition of their selfless commitment and courage Frontline Healthcare workers qualify for 35% off Ongava Recommended Selling (Rack) Rate up to 31 December 2022.

The Ongava Long Stay Special - less 25% for bookings from four days and more - is extended through High Season 2021 ends June 2022.

Ongava Reservations service continues uninterrupted apart from 24 December (Christmas Eve), 25 December (Christmas Day), 26 December (Family Day), 31 December (Old Year’s Eve), and 1 January (New Year’s Day).

As always please feel free to contact us at any time if you have any questions.

Compliments of the Season!

We can barely contain our excitement at all the wonderful adventures and developments that lie in store. It is only appropriate that we thank you for helping us to protect wild places and endangered species.

It is my fervent desire that we can share a cheerful campfire under the southern cross in the not too distant future.

Wishing you and yours happy holidays and a safe, successful 2021.

Rob Moffett

Ongava Game Reserve

Purchase photo/4K video: portfolio1 portfolio2
Aerial photo/video service/inquiries: info@traveltonamibia.com

Thursday, 18 June 2020

LITTLE MOMBO CAMP MOREMI BOTSWANA WILDLIFE | ЖИВОТНЫЙ МИР ЛИТТЛ МОМБО

LITTLE MOMBO CAMP MOREMI BOTSWANA WILDLIFE | ЖИВОТНЫЙ МИР ЛИТТЛ МОМБО КЕМП ПАРК МОРЕМИ БОТСВАНА
Little Mombo Camp: http://www.namibweb.com/littlemombocamp.htm Little Mombo Camp Botswana Luxurious Little Mombo Camp is situated on Mombo Island, adjoining the northern tip of Chief's Island, within the Moremi Game Reserve in the Okavango Delta in northern Botswana. The island is surrounded by open floodplains and the camp itself is largely built in and around the shade of some large mangosteen, ebony, and fig trees overlooking a wonderful floodplain teeming with game. Together with Mombo Camp, Little Mombo is the spirtual home of the Botswana Rhino Reintroduction Project. It combines luxury and service excellence with the amazing natural splendour that is the Mombo wildlife area. With just four tents tucked away on the other side of the same island, Little Mombo is a smaller, more intimate version of Mombo Camp. Built under a shady canopy of jackalberry and sausage trees, overlooking a floodplain regularly visited by herds of herbivores (and their predators), the camp has its own facilities, including a dining area, boma, kitchen, lounge and pool, while being connected to Mombo via a raised boardwalk. Renowned as “the Place of Plenty,” the enormous number and variety of wildlife around Little Mombo makes it a hugely sought-after wildlife-viewing destination. © Exploring Namibia TV Soundtrack: Home for the Holidays Chris Haugen Facebook: NAMIBIA: https://www.facebook.com/groups/namibia.namibia BOTSWANA: https://www.facebook.com/groups/botswana1 EQUIPMENT | ОБОРУДОВАНИЕ:
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Purchase photo/4K video: portfolio1 portfolio2
Aerial photo/video service/inquiries: info@traveltonamibia.com

Thursday, 9 January 2020

Zimbabwe: Bushtracks Africa: Chikwenya and Ruckomechi

Bushtracks Africa update

Chikwenya Camp, Ruckomechi Camp and Little Ruckomechi Camp in Mana Pools, Zimbabwe, are open for 2019.

The camps are situated in Mana Pools National Park, Zimbabwe, and operate on a season schedule. These camps opened in 2019.

“We are looking forward to welcoming our guests to another great season in this piece of paradise. Both Chikwenya and Ruckomechi epitomise a true bush camp experience, with the personal service, intimacy and warmth for which our tented camps are renowned.

With both camps set in private concessions with exclusive access to spectacular stretches of the Zambezi River, our guests will be spoilt for choice when it comes to choosing the tempo of their day – from walks to game drives, boating and fishing, there is truly something for everyone” said Dean Morton, Wilderness Safaris
Purchase photo/4K video: portfolio1 portfolio2
Aerial photo/video service/inquiries: info@traveltonamibia.com

Saturday, 27 October 2018

Namibia: reopening of Serra Cafema Camp in Kaokoland | Серра Кафема Кемп Намибия

Serra Cafema, Kaokoland, Namibia, Wilderness Safaris, Kunene River, Hartmann’s Valley, Marienfluss Conservancy, Himba, Серра Кафема Кемп Намибия

The New Serra Cafema Opens
After an environmentally-sensitive and inspiring rebuild, Wilderness Safaris’ Serra Cafema Camp, in Namibia’s extreme north-west, has reopened. Located in one of the most remote regions in southern Africa, on the banks of the Kunene River in the Hartmann’s Valley, Serra Cafema offers life-changing journeys to this extraordinary desert location, ensuring the ongoing biodiversity protection of this pristine area and positively impacting the local community members of the Marienfluss Conservancy.
The new camp celebrates local Himba culture and its extraordinary remote desert location.
Purchase photo/4K video: portfolio1 portfolio2
Aerial photo/video service/inquiries: info@traveltonamibia.com

Tuesday, 17 July 2018

Wilderness Airstrip service fee | Вилдернесс Сафарис Африка

#Namibia #Botswana #WildernessSafaris #MajorBlueAir #DeltaAirlines #MackAir #NaturalSelection #Africa #Dronesberg #ВилдернессСафарисАфрика

Notification regarding the Wilderness Airstrip service fee for 2018

Botswana Airstrip Transfer Service Fee

A transfer service fee has been introduced by Wilderness Safaris for transfers between airstrips and the Wilderness Safaris Botswana camps. This fee is levied on the air charter operators resulting in an increase in flying rates as per the below:

° Seat in plane                    $15 per person per trip.
° Charter flights                  $50 per trip.

A trip is either to or from a Wilderness Safaris Camp.

These fees are applicable to all new booking enquireies for travel on or after 1st January 2018 and will apply to all flights on Major Blue Air, Delta Air Lines and Mack Air as suppliers to Natural Selection.
YouTube channel: Exploring Namibia
Purchase photo/4K video: portfolio
Aerial photo/video service & other inquiries contact: info@traveltonamibia.com

Thursday, 1 September 2016

Namibia: Namibia’s Desert Lions - Wilderness Safaris update | Убийство льва пустыни в Намибии

#WildernessSafarisNamibia
#NamibiaDesertLions
#УбийствоЛьваПустыниВНамибии

A Human-Wildlife Tragedy – Namibia’s Desert Lions

Today, just three days after celebrating World Lion Day on 10 August, we mourn the lives of three desert-adapted lions killed this week after being poisoned in a Namibian human-wildlife conflict incident. The Five Musketeers captured the hearts of people from all corners of our planet – their story is one of survival, triumph, hardship and tragedy.

It was with gut-wrenching disbelief and sadness that we received the news on Wednesday that three of the four (originally five) Musketeers, the famous desert-adapted lions of the Namib Desert, had been poisoned by pastoralists and that their bodies and satellite collars had been burnt. Now just one lion from this cohort remains – Tullamore (XPL-93).

Desert lions Namibia

This news came at the very time the lions were about to be translocated from the Tomakas settlement to the Uniab Delta (an area that would be safer) as a last-resort effort to solve the on-going human-lion conflict with these villagers. The Uniab Delta was ear-marked as the safest territorial option by Dr Philip Stander, the conservationist who has dedicated 25 years to researching Namibia’s desert-adapted lions and who has made it his life’s mission to protect these desert survivors.

The fifth Musketeer, known as Harry (XPL-89), met his fate earlier this year when the lions came into perilously close contact with settlers at a temporary cattle post (12 km west of Tomakas). Harry died of a bullet wound to his chest.

Human-lion conflict is obviously a big challenge in this area and a situation that Chris Roche, Wilderness Safaris Chief Marketing Officer, elaborates on below:

“One of the challenges for Namibia’s population of some two million people (and the reason it is this low in the first place) is that, except for small portion of the extreme north east of the country, Namibia effectively straddles two deserts – the Namib and the Kalahari. As a result, carrying capacity for livestock as well as agricultural productivity is very low. This is most marked in the north-western parts of the Kunene Province – the areas of Damaraland and Kaokoveld that these desert-adapted lions roam.

Desert lions Namibia
Rainfall here varies with annual averages from maybe 25 mm to certainly less than 100 mm. People and livestock are able to exist at the eastern edge of this continuum where rainfall is highest. Wildlife ekes out an existence on the western part of the continuum. Add to that the current drought conditions being experienced in this part of the country and access to the few remaining watering or grazing resources bring these two worlds into conflict. Where lion prides use predictable ranges they are able to avoid this conflict. It is the wide-ranging lions on the edge (and dispersing males such as the Musketeers fall squarely into this category) that are vulnerable to the conflict. This is what is referred to as an ‘edge effect’ and is the primary threat to the survival of large mammal species (and particularly predators), not just in Africa but across the world. The cause of the edge effect of course is the growth in human population and incursion into previously wild territory.”

The question on everybody’s lips now is of course, ‘What will happen to the remaining lion?’ Dr Stander has reported that XPl-93, also known as Tullamore, has been moved from Tomakas to the mouth of the Uniab River. He is now recovering from his sedation and has been feeding on an oryx carcass. This morning he was reported to be fully recovered and has started exploring his new territory. Naturally his movements will be monitored closely.

Chris continues, “Hoanib Camp is operated on a lease and revenue share basis from the three community conservancies surrounding that area. Employment is also community-centric (together with skills training and the like). The resident people are in fact well-disposed to lions since they see the benefits of a tourism partnership. When drought causes people from outside to move into new areas with their livestock this balance and harmony is vulnerable to upset and this is what tragically happened in this case.

What can we do to change this situation around? Essentially continue to do what we have been doing in this area, together with partners such as Dr Philip Stander and the Ministry of Environment and Wildlife and the NGO Integrated Rural Development and Nature Conservation, and hope that the success of camps like Hoanib and documentaries like Vanishing Kings (and a planned sequel that tells the conclusion of this tragic story) can attract others to our cause until we achieve a sea change in attitudes and a revolution in rural economies.”




Desert lions Namibia
What else is being done?

The H.E.L.P project

H.E.L.P (Human Elephant Lion Project) is a new programme that is a co-operative venture between the Desert Lion Conservation Foundation, the Desert Lion Trust, the Desert Elephant Project, the IRDNC and the Namibian Ministry of Environment and Tourism. The project aims to secure donations and funds to create pro-active management and action for desert-adapted elephant and lion. The programme, with enough funds, will be launched in early November 2016. Will and Liane Steenkamp, filmmakers of Vanishing Kings, have already donated a year’s salary, satellite phone and basic camping gear for the first lion guardian in the area and together with the Desert Lion Trust and TOSCO are actively assisting local farmers to avoid more conflict.

Why do we believe in desert-adapted lion conservation?

    The range of the desert-adapted lion, and its population in the Kaokoveld and Skeleton Coast has grown dramatically over the past 15 years
    Community attitudes continue to change and despite continued conflict, lion mortalities are declining
    The success of our own camp in the area is attracting others and these will continue to bring benefits to Namibia’s remote, rural communities
    We have built a research centre and secondary home base for the Desert Lion Project at Hoanib Camp and supported the making of a documentary that has brought the plight of this population to the world’s attention

What about the other lions of the Namib?

The Floodplain lionesses, also seen around Hoanib Camp, recently brought three healthy cubs into the world. Camp manager Clement Lawrence has shared his photographs in an album on our blog.

Guests at Desert Rhino, Damaraland and Doro Nawas Camp, as well as those on our mobile Explorations safaris across the region, regularly share their amazing sightings of the lions.

 
YouTube channel: Exploring Namibia
Aerial photo/video service & other inquiries contact: info@traveltonamibia.com

Saturday, 17 October 2015

Botswana: Wilderness Safaris’ secretive tax havens

Wilderness Safaris’ secretive tax havens

A year-long investigation by The Botswana Gazette has revealed how the Wilderness Safaris Group, a major multinational tourism company has set up a web of shell companies in controversial and secretive offshore islands with low tax regimes where it has little or no genuine operations, writes staff writer Lawrence Seretse.


The European Union has stated that secret offshore shell companies trigger a public outcry for being, more often than not, a shelter for tax dodgers, warmongers, drug and arms traffickers and the criminal underworld that want to hide illicit funds from authorities since they thrive on a system of financial secrecy. Infamously, Gaddafi, Mubarak and Ben Ali had their accounts frozen in the most famous of all tax havens; Switzerland.

President Ian Khama owns shares in Baobab Safaris, Seba Safaris, and Linyanti Investments. These three companies are major subsidiaries of the Wilderness Group, of which the chairman is the President’s lawyer and confidante, Parks Tafa. His nephew, Marcus Ter Haar, sits on the board of directors.
Investigations have unearthed that Wilderness owns 35 subsidiaries, some of which are shell companies where there are no physical offices, employees and any day-to-day operational activities.

On April 25 1995, Wilderness set up a finance and asset management company named The Wilderness Limited Company in the little tax haven of Bermuda.
Wilderness Safaris Group owns another finance and asset management company called Norisco Holdings S.A in the tax havens of Luxembourg and Seychelles.

Wilderness Safaris Group also owns a subsidiary called New Wilderness Holdings in a low tax jurisdiction island of Mauritius. The local Wilderness Group holds 12 000 and 19 600 shares in the Bermuda and in Norisco-Luxembourg tax havens respectively.

Importantly, ownership of companies in tax havens does not suggest illegal activity. The tax haven of Bermuda has a legislative requirement that details the criteria of formation of an exempted limited liability company in Bermuda. This document details that foreign owned companies are entitled to apply for an undertaking from the Bermuda government for an exemption from tax on payment of a US$170 fee.

“Apart from the above, there are no fees or taxes payable in Bermuda by the exempted company,” read a part of the Bermuda registrar of companies’ documents.
“We offer wealth protection, tax reduction, cross border investment and Bermuda is not party to any double tax agreements,” the document read further.
The 2013 tax avoidance scandals in Europe and the United Kingdoms (UK) by Starbucks, Google, and Amazon caused all three multinational companies to revise and reconsider their tax structures, including the use of tax havens and other tax avoidance schemes.

Asked to explain if President Khama was aware of the reputation concerns relating to the use of tax havens, his Senior Private Secretary, George Tlhalerwa stated that Khama was a shareholder in the company in his individual capacity and not as the President.

“He made an investment long before his tenure as President. Remember that he holds three personas; that of President, party president and a private individual so these transactions and business dealings have nothing to do with the  presidency,” Tlhalerwa briefly attempted to draw a line between Khama’s private business and public office.

Dubious directors and addresses
Records extracted from the Bermuda Registrar of Companies by The Botswana Gazette indicate that The Wilderness Limited Company’s physical address is merely a post box address. The company conducts no business operations within Bermuda or abroad.
Inexplicably, the company has three nominee directors, two of whom are also directors to thousands of other companies domiciled at the same address; Clarendon House, Church Street, Hamilton HM 11, Bermuda. Thousand other companies are also registered to this address.
The International Consortium of Investigative Journalist database, ‘Offshore Leaks’ has revealed that the nominee director for The Wilderness Limited Company, David G Cooper is also a director in 24 other companies said to be registered to the same address.
Company records indicate that another director, Enerst A. Morisson of Wilderness Limited Company in Bermuda is a nominee director in more than 15 other companies in Bermuda on the same Clarendon House, Church Street Hamilton HM 11 address.
These two directors are also nominee directors in over 1000 other companies.
Questionnaires sent to the Bermuda Registrar of Companies drew a blank since the country has no requirements for companies to publicize their incorporation, and no regulatory pre-approval is required.

NO STAFF MEMBERS
In its 2013 annual report, Wilderness listed a number of its subsidiaries and the number of employees engaged. In Botswana it listed 1005 employees in all its facilities and the rest of Southern African countries where it operates but the Bermuda company listed no employees but continues to be listed as a significant shareholder in the Botswana Stock Exchange quoted Wilderness group.
Also, in the same annual report, the company listed a number of lease agreements that it has entered into with countries like Zimbabwe, Zambia, Namibia and South Africa for tourism concessions but the Bermuda company has not indicated any lease agreements with the Bermuda government for tourism and travel business purposes.

The report shows that amongst its shareholders, the tax haven based shell companies comprising of The Wilderness Company in Bermuda, New Wilderness Holdings in Mauritius and Norisco in Luxembourg have no employees and organizational operational activities. They also have no camps, safaris and hotels doing genuine business except for an island resort managed by Norisco Holdings in Seychelles. In addition, both Bermuda and Mauritius have no Corporate Social Investment (CSI) projects listed in the local Wilderness reports from 2006 to 2014.
For their part, Gaborone based Wilderness Group company secretary, Sydney Mganga, said that the Bermuda subsidiary was the Group’s overall holding company before it was restructured in 2005 and now operates the Group’s self-insurance fund.

“The Group owns 20% of an associated company, Norisco Holdings SA, registered in Luxembourg.  This owned North Island Company Limited, the operating company for North Island camp in the Seychelles, was sold in 2010.  Following that disposal, Norisco Holdings SA is in the process of being de-registered,” explained Mganga, further stating that these were all operating or holding companies and were not used to minimize tax in Botswana.
He denied any investments in the Seychelles or Mauritian companies but their 2010 annual report indicates that: “New Wilderness Holdings Limited is an investment holding company registered in Mauritius (Registration number C2/04/04519) through which certain of the executive Directors hold their interests in Wilderness Holdings Limited (the Group).”

The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) listed Bermuda, Mauritius, Seychelles, Luxembourg, Switzerland, and British Virgin Islands among the top ten obvious tax havens. Bermuda, the Cayman Islands, and the Bahamas for example, have a tax rate of zero percent and top the most secretive in the list.

The Tax Justice Network and other international organizations have stated that the problem arising from tax havens is that with “their wealth offshore, elites in developing countries have little incentive to push for better governance at home”. They state further that this creates a difficulty when “… well-intentioned reformist governments take power, they might find that the money needed to improve public administration remains in the hands of the rulers they replaced, hidden behind anonymous trusts in secret bank accounts.”
The Stanley Tollman saga and Tax scandals
The Tollman family owns Travel Corporation. Wine Investments Limited, a subsidiary of Travel Corporation holds the largest stake in the Wilderness Group. Gavin and Michael Tollman, nieces of the Tollman family head, Stanley Tollman, are directors in the company. Investigations by The Botswana Gazette have revealed that Wine Investments is also registered in Bermuda and that Michael Tollman holds interests in five companies registered in the British Virgin Islands and 18 others in Guernsey; both tax havens which have been placed on the European Union (EU) blacklist.
When contacted for comment, Michael Tollman told The Botswana Gazette that these islands comply with international tax requirements and there was nothing wrong with registering companies there. Quizzed if he was aware of the reputation concerns relating to the use of tax havens by large corporations, he responded:
“Why don’t you contact the British Virgin Islands, I understand they comply with all the laws concerned, I also cannot answer you further,” he stated before hanging up.
The elder Tollman, Stanley, was in 2008, involved in tax evasion and fraud cases amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars. New York Times reporter, Martin Espinoza reported that Tollman, 78, pleaded guilty to one count of tax evasion, paying more than $60 million in back taxes, interest and fraud penalties. Further, he agreed to pay $44.7 million to settle a civil forfeiture suit related to allegations in a 2002 indictment charging him and six others with various fraud offences. Tollman had fled the US just before the indictments and settled in the UK in 2002.
“The United States attorney’s office says that during the late 1980s and early 1990s, Mr.Tollman and his wife, Beatrice Nina Tollman, opened a series of bank accounts on the island of Guernsey, in the English Channel.

When this reporter broke the story at Mmegi, Michael Tollman responded that he was aware of the tax evasion and bank fraud issue but said that the issue had nothing to do with Wilderness since it was resolved a long time back. “I am aware of the issue but they resolved it, it is history and it is done with. It has nothing to do with Wilderness,” he had said at the time.

But in April this year, the British Conservative Party returned a donation of ?50,000 from Beatrice Tollman who the American authorities had previously sought to extradite from the UK to face tax fraud charges.

A judge dismissed the charges against her on the same day in 2008 that her husband Stanley Tollman pleaded guilty to tax evasion.
Tollman repaid more than 100 million US dollars to America tax authorities after the couple spent five years fighting off attempts to extradite Mrs.Tollman from the UK.

African Union
In May 2015 former President, Thabo Mbeki told the Pan African Parliament that illegal financial flows have cost the continent $1 trillion over the past 50 years.

Mbeki, the chairperson of the African Union’s (AU) panel on illicit financial flows said that multinational corporations are the prime suspects and illegal drug trafficking accounts for about 30 percent of the money.

“The figure of US$50 billion is an underestimate, as it excludes such elements as trading services and intangibles, process of bribery, and trafficking drugs, people and firearms,” stated Mbeki.

He said the failure of African states to prevent the outflow of capital and tax evasion has had a serious impact on Africa’s growth.
The Washington based Global Financial Integrity has also stated that Botswana had lost P80 billion to tax avoidance between 2002 and 2012 and this is made worse by the fact that Botswana has long abolished exchange controls.

Other prominent shareholders of Wilderness Group either directly or indirectly through subsidiaries include Directorate of Intelligence and Security Services (DISS) Director General, Isaac Kgosi, former Debswana Managing Director, Blackie Marole, former BDF Commander, Lt Gen. Tebogo Masire and the Saleshando family.

Story: www.gazettebw.com