By Peter Makwanya This week will be loaded on the international environmental calendar. First, there will be the International Day of Forests on March 21, followed by the World Water Day on March 22 and the World Meteorological Day on March 23 2021. All the three international events of world appeal, scope and connection will be held in a single week. These are being commemorated against the background of increasing water scarcities and pollution, and rapid forest losses as a result of human activities and climate change. This has left poor communities who rely on forest resources and natural ecosystemic services heavily exposed. Not to be outdone are multinational logging companies from far afield in association with local proxies in African countries threatening to strip the African forests naked for a song. The African forests are at the centre of attraction due to their diverse tree species of high value, natural beauty, serenity and fresh water sources, home to a wide range of flora and fauna that has not escaped the coveted eyes of the intruder for centuries. Forests and water form the natural wonders of the environment around the world from the Amazon rainforests, vast tropical wonders of central Africa, eastern and southern Africa, the Congo Basin, with the majestic Congo, Zambezi and Nile rivers snaking through the African virgin forests, delivering fresh water. These commemorations could not have come at a better time than when some expansionist and environmental injustices are taking place in the Okavango Delta, from oil and natural gas explorations threatening one of the world’s finest natural wonders. This is also home to the world’s vast and diverse wildlife and fresh water sources. It is during these important commemorations that the presence of the greedy multinationals in the Okavango Delta should be shamed. According to Cuthbert and Taylor, in 2014, a group of African scientists met in Tanzania and estimated that Africa’s ground water reserves may be more resilient to climate change than previously thought. Groundwater reserves in Africa are believed to be 20 times larger than the water stored in lakes and reservoirs above the ground. These are the fresh water stores that flow from the rocks and sediments beneath the earth’s surface. They are a vital source of drinking water for the Sub-Saharan Africa, where groundwater is often the only year-round supply of fresh water in rural areas. As the world commemorates these important events on the international environmental calendar, Africa is threatened, both internally and from the outside. Internally, the continent is replete with unsustainable mining practices which threaten water resources through unregulated use of toxins and industrial chemicals that also lead to water bodies being contaminated or drying. External capital comes to destroy forests without any attempts to regenerate while also as what is happening in the Okavango, wildlife would be threatened and driven away from their water sources, thereby conflicting with local communities. As has