The park is managed by the
Uganda Wildlife Authority. The
USAID as of August 2013 was financing the improvement of roads within the park. • 1964–1974 Ian Ross • 1994– Peter Lotyang • 1996 Anjelo Ajoka • 1998 (acting) Daniel Aleper • 2001-2002 Joseph Sentongo • 2003-2006 Kuloao Okwongo Edward Asalu as chief park warden Capt. John Emille Otekat also worked as chief park warden • 2008 Henry Tusubira • 2013 Johnson Masereka
Finances In the fiscal year 2009-2010 Kidepo received
USh 294 million (US$129,000 or €99,000 as of August 1, 2010) from 2,100 visitors. By the 2012-2013 fiscal year this had grown to USh 466 million ($178,000 or €134,000 as of August 1, 2013) from 2300 visitors.
Conservation activity Elephant Elephants were poached to extinction in the Kidepo area in the decade beginning 1900. The Protectorate of Uganda government did not extend into Karamoja, allowing unchecked the "wholesale slaughter and the wounding of enormous numbers of elephants" for the trade of ivory through
Kaabong and onward to
Maji, Ethiopia.
Giraffe volunteers on a hide During the 1960s Kidepo had a sustainable
Rothschild giraffe population of over 400 animals. By 1992 this had been poached down to only three animals, including a single female. In 1997 Warden Peter Möller obtained funding from the
Frankfurt Zoological Society to
translocate giraffes from Kenya's
Lake Nakuru National Park. One female died in the holding facility in Lake Nakuru. Two females and one male were flown to Kidepo. In Kidepo one male was eaten by lions shortly after being released. Fourteen additional giraffes were brought to Kidepo in August 2018, bringing the estimated total population to 48. The animals were brought from
Murchison Falls National Park, where oil drilling was expected to threaten wildlife.The reintroduction appeared to be successful, as the population grew to 89 animals by 2022.
Kob Hundreds of kob were translocated to Kidepo. More than 100 animals were brought from Murchison in 2017. In 2023 a further 200 were translocated from
Kabwoya Wildlife Reserve.
Rhinoceros Rhinoceros had existed in the Kidepo area until they were poached to extinction. In the seven years leading up to 1978, the population dwindled from 50 to 16, and the last specimen was seen in 1983. In March 2026 UWA translocated four
southern white rhinos from
Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary to a
boma within Kidepo, with support from Global Conservation,
Uganda Conservation Foundation, and other private organizations. Additional animals were expected to be brought to Kidepo, including some from Kenya, where Ziwa's first also originated. ==References==