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http://www.news24.com/SciTech/News/Army-in-new-border-war-20110723
Army in new border war
2011-07-24 17:14
Skukuza - They used to rely on snares, poison and shotguns to
kill rhinos for their horns. Now international crime syndicates
are arming poachers with night-vision goggles and AK-47 assault
rifles as the price for rhino horn surpasses gold.
When the crackle of gunfire signals the death of yet another
rhino, radios squawk to life here in Kruger National Park and
soldiers ready for pre-dawn patrols.
"They've become very aggressive," Ken Maggs, head of the South
African government environmental crime investigation unit, said
of the poachers. "They leave notes for us written in the sand,
warnings. That indicates it is an escalating issue... They are
coming in prepared to fight."
South Africa is home to 90% of the rhinos left on the continent
and is fighting back. Since more than 140 troops were deployed
in April, the number of rhinos killed in Kruger has dropped from
40 in March and 30 in April to 15 in May and just two in June.
Fifteen alleged poachers also have been killed this year, and
nine suspects wounded in gunfights.
Still, rhino carcasses with mutilated faces are becoming a
common sight in African wildlife parks. The hacked-off horns are
destined to be smuggled to China and Vietnam, where traditional
medicine practitioners grind them up for sale as alleged cures
for everything from fevers to arthritis and cancer.
The horns have become so valuable that thieves this year started
stealing rhino exhibits in European museums. The going rate is
up to $60 000 a kg according to the London Metropolitan Police
department.
Even in the United States, police in Denver have arrested
members of an Irish syndicate trying to smuggle rhino horn.
Officials corrupt
"Aside from Central and South America, every region of the world
appears to be affected by criminals who are fraudulently
acquiring rhinoceros horns," warned John Sellar, enforcement
chief of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species.
"Government officials are being corrupted. Money-laundering is
taking place," he said.
Kruger sprawls across 2 million hectares and around two-thirds
of poachers come on foot across the border from Mozambique.
Bongie Vilakazi says the poachers have reacted to the South
African army presence by travelling in much larger gangs of up
to seven people.
"They come across around sunset, aim to shoot the rhino before
dark and then spend the night in the bush before heading home
with the horn," Vilakazi said.
Soldiers do not patrol at night though because of the dangerous
nocturnal predators: Once, a pride of lions charged at troops in
the back of an open van transporting meat, Vilakazi said. The
soldiers fired into the air to frighten away the lions. Now they
use closed vehicles and live on canned rations.
South Africa's troops are concentrated in 16 temporary bases in
the Sabi River valley where two-thirds of rhino killings have
occurred.
Park rangers said the deployment has hugely boosted their
coverage.
"Before, we were four rangers trying to cover 87km ², which is
nearly impossible," said Corporal Reckson Mashaba, speaking at a
tent camp covered with camouflage netting where he and other
soldiers fall asleep to the roar of lions.
333 rhinos last year
Soldiers have been issued high-calibre R1 rifles - in case they
need to shoot an elephant or rhino in self-defence, Brigadier
General Koos Liebenberg said.
The South African military also has set up spy cameras, but
Major General Barney Hlatshwayo said they need equipment to feed
photos in real time so soldiers can respond immediately.
Rhinos have been near extinction before. There were about 100
000 black rhinos in the 1960s, but they were hunted and poached
until just 2 400 remained in the 1990s. Conservation efforts
have nearly doubled their numbers, but they remain a critically
endangered species.
A century ago, there were only about 50 white rhinos left. Now,
there are about 20 000, thanks to conservation, relocation to
safer regions and many more wildlife refuges and ranches.
But poachers killed 333 rhinos in South Africa last year. And
the toll for the first six months of this year is 218 and likely
will top 400 at the current tempo, according to Maggs, the head
of the government environmental crime investigation unit.
Conservationists have failed to persuade traditional Chinese
medicine practitioners and consumers that rhino horn has no
medicinal value. Some link the upsurge in rhino poaching to a
2007 Chinese government decision to promote traditional medicine
as alternative medicine grows increasingly popular in the West
as well.
Until then, South Africa was losing about 10 rhinos a year to
poachers.
Trophy hunting in South Africa is compounding the problem. More
than 100 white rhinos were killed under permit here last year.
The Department of Environment did not respond to questions about
permits issued this year.
Legal hunting
So tempting are the rewards that veterinarians and game ranchers
- the very people supposedly dedicated to conserving wildlife -
have been arrested in recent months for alleged involvement in
the rhino horn trade.
Yet the National Parks department continues to sell wildlife,
including rhinos, to game ranchers.
Two Vietnamese citizens were arrested in January in illegal
possession of rhino horns killed on a legal hunt.
Police working with tax officials last month arrested a Thai man
believed to be a syndicate leader, along with five alleged Thai
hunters accused of using legal hunting to illegally acquire
horns.
Permits are needed to export one trophy horn per hunter. The
horn has to be mounted by a taxidermist.
South Africa also has been criticised for exporting young rhinos
to China. Conservationists fear they will be farmed for their
horns but China denied any such plans.
Still, suspicions remain and South Africa last year halted live
rhino exports.
Some say the war can never be won and believe the only way to
save the species is through legalising the rhino horn trade.
Worth more dead
"If farmers were making a profit out of rhinos they would have
the will to guard them against poachers," said rancher John
Hume, owner of the largest number of privately held rhino in the
world.
"Instead, they are siding with the poachers because a rhino is
worth more dead than alive."
He said some farmers "just contract with an illegal dealer,
shoot the rhino, bury the body, take the horn. It pays him to
kill it."
Game ranchers have taken to giving quotes for rhino hunts
depending on the weight of the horn, he said, though for
Westerners the quote still comes according to the length. At its
source, rhino horn is selling in South Africa for about R10 000
a kg, Hume said.
As the price soars abroad, some countries are asking why they
cannot use a massive stockpile of rhino horns to finance
conservation.
Africa has at least 25 000kg of rhino horn under government and
private ownership, with 90% held in South Africa, Zimbabwe and
Namibia.
Zimbabwe, where top-ranking military and government officials
are accused of profiting from rhino poaching, said in February
it would ask Cites for a special dispensation to sell some of
its stockpile.
Conservationists warn that a similar sale of elephant tusks in
the 1990s only whetted people's appetite for ivory and led to a
surge in elephant poaching.
"This is an emergency. We're at war here," said Joseph Okori of
the World Wildlife Fund.
- SAPA |