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By Citizen Reporter

Journalist


Forget lockdown, here’s when you can visit SANParks for free

SA National Parks Week is an annual campaign that gives all South African citizens the opportunity to enter most of the parks managed by SANParks for free.


The 15th annual SA National Parks Week will run from 16 to 20 November 2020, when local visitors don’t have to pay for access to the country’s magnificent national parks.

SANParks CEO Fundisile Mketeni said, “SANParks has postponed the free access week which is traditionally held in September, to November due to the Covid-19 alert level 2 regulations, which restrict the number of persons allowed within public spaces.

“Additionally, we have implemented extra visitor management procedures in the parks to manage visitor volumes in line with regulations to further mitigate the risk of the spread of coronavirus at this time.”

SA National Parks Week is an annual campaign that gives all South African citizens the opportunity to enter most of the parks managed by SANParks for free, with the exclusion of Namaqua National Park and Boulders section at Table Mountain National Park. The free access to parks does not include free access to accommodation facilities and other tourist activities.

Every year SANParks aims to increase the number of citizens that are granted free access to national parks during this time. “Since the programme was started in 2006, about 551 393 South Africans have been afforded the opportunity to enter national parks, and we want to see these numbers grow.”

Mketeni added: “The week in partnership with Total South Africa and FNB is meant to cultivate a sense of pride in South Africa’s natural, cultural and historical heritage and a deeper appreciation of biodiversity. It is important for South Africans to visit and know the importance of national parks.”

Mketeni highlighed the growing need for national parks to be relevant, particularly to young people and communities living adjacent to parks.

“Through our Socio-Economic Transformation programmes and our Expanded Public Works Programme, we work closely with communities living adjacent to national parks in order to be more inclusive so we can tackle issues of wildlife crime with their help, afford them more access to parks for cultural use, inform young people about the different career options that parks have to offer and create job opportunities. SANParks hopes to strengthen and enable those communities to reap the benefits of the national parks.”

Visit the SANParks website for more information here.

(Compiled by Carina Koen)

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