• Animal Welfare Magazine: January to June 2025
    The January to June 2025 Animal Welfare Magazine is now ready. Read/Download a pdf version.Read More ...
  • Animal Rescues in the Wild
    ANAW's Veterinary doctors attend to a wounded waterback caught by a poacher's wire snare during a recent animal rescue activity. Find out more about our animal rescues programme.Read More ...
  • Promoting Animal Welfare in Schools-PAWS
    ANAW endeavors to promote a value based education program that inculcates young minds into compassionate individuals on the welfare of animals.Read More ...

Africa Animal Welfare Conference (AAWC) is an annual conference co-hosted by Africa Network for Animal Welfare (ANAW) in collaboration with United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), African Union InterAfrican Bureau for Animal Resources (AU-IBAR) and the Government of the Country on Which the Conference is held, for professionals and practitioners, coming together to discuss issues that cut across animal welfare, wildlife and environmental conservation. Visit the conference website to find out more

Media Centre

Donkeys at Risk of Becoming Extinct
Kenyans Might be Consuming Donkey Meat Unknowingly

More on our Media Centre ...

ANAW & Welttierschutzgesellschaft e.V (WTG) Project

TITLE: Enhancing Donkey Welfare in Kenya

Africa Network for Animal Welfare (ANAW), in partnership with Welttierschutzgesellschaft (WTG), is implementing a project titled “Enhancing the Welfare and Health of Donkeys in Migori and Marsabit Counties and Enhancing Donkey Security through Media and Stakeholder Collaboration.” Running from April 2025 to March 2026, the project seeks to improve the welfare and health of donkeys in Migori and Marsabit counties, Kenya. It addresses critical challenges such as limited access to veterinary care, poor husbandry practices, and the growing threat of illegal donkey slaughter driven by the donkey skin trade. Key interventions include training, veterinary services, community surveillance, and media advocacy. ... Click Here to Read More ... 

Photo Speak

Why the National Wildlife Strategy 2030?

Our wildlife, and wildlife habitats, are an extremely important economic asset. They are central to our world-renowned tourism industry that attracts over one million tourists to our country every year.

Download the National Wildlife Strategy 2030

Current Projects with Partners

The Indigenous Community of Tsavo East National Park

Together with a team from Africa Network for Animal Welfare (ANAW), I set out for a field trip that would inform our activities for the year 2020. My love for animals in their natural environs had me eagerly looking forward to seeing the big five on this expedition. Our drive from Nairobi down the smooth Mombasa highway was mostly uneventful as we talked about everything from work, animals, roads to Kenyan politics. After about five hours, we arrived at the largest town in Taita-Taveta County, Voi. After a quick lunch, we were out again to meet the first community of a people known as the Watha. I wondered about these people who I later found out are also referred to in literature as the Waatha, Watta or Sanye. The Watha, I later learnt, are an indigenous Cushitic group that have lived in areas bordering wildlife protected areas. They can be seen running homesteads in the counties of Kwale, Kilifi and Tana River. They are also found in the rich bio-diversity forested hills of Kilibasi and in various coastal forests including the Arabuko Sokoke. I took time to find out more about them by scanning through various online literature and listened keenly as we met different communities who to me are a little-known people of Kenya. I had been ignorant and unfamiliar about an indigenous community existing within the Tsavo ecosystem! You see, all I knew about the Tsavo is that one went there to find wild animals particularly the elephant. You can only imagine my surprise when I heard the Watha being referred to as The Elephant People!

Hearing about the Watha and their history, left me feeling rather lost in time as I wondered where we or they have been. It appears that we left them behind going on with life in the city oblivious of the plight of a people who have always been part of Kenya. Historically, these are a community of hunters and gatherers that lived off bush meat and traded in wildlife items such as rhino horns and elephant tusks. Their knowledge of the bush and game hunting which was once profitable, in the days of hunting safaris, now leads to their arrest and imprisonment. Their former lifestyle is no longer sustainable in the modern context and the area they once lived in and lived off was taken from them to create the current Tsavo East National Park.

My colleagues and I reasoned that while the government’s need for conservation was met, the Watha community were left without an alternative means of livelihood. Their traditional dependence on honey and bush meat has been challenged in post-colonial Kenya resulting in a community that is currently characterized by youth unemployment and poverty.

Education may be the solution to some of these challenges but this story does not end with Watha children going to school because we still need to know and share about whether Watha children go to school and how.
Africa Conservation Education Fund (ACEF) is a program of Africa Network of Animal Welfare (ANAW) that was established to raise funds for the education of children from communities in wildlife areas.

Read more here https://www.anaw.org/index.php/africa-conservation-education-fund
Or for more information write to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

ANAW is accredited to United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) as a major group and to the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) as an advisor with consultative status.
https://www.unenvironment.org/civil-society-engagement/accreditation/list-accredited-organizations