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http://mg.co.za/article/2011-04-01-extinction-threat-ups-hunters-game/
Extinction threat ups hunters' game
FIONA MACLEOD - Apr 01 2011 08:31
At least 79 rhinos have been killed in South Africa since the
beginning of the year amid evidence that syndicates are
stockpiling horns in anticipation of the extinction of the
species.
In the past two weeks nine rhinos have been killed in what
international conservationists described as "Africa's worst
poaching crisis in decades". Kevin Bewick, the head of the
Anti-Poaching Intelligence Group Southern Africa, told the Mail
& Guardian that syndicates in Asia were stockpiling horns to
supply a growing demand for traditional medicines.
"It's a supply-and-demand situation," Bewick said. "An
increasingly wealthy middle class in Vietnam, Malaysia and China
wrongly believe rhino horn can cure diseases, including cancer."
Recent studies in the United States had shown that the horns
comprise calcium, melanin and keratin, similar to horses'
hooves, with no medicinal properties.
Bewick said the main reason for the rise in fatalities in the
past three years -- from 13 in 2007 to 333 last year -- was the
lack of resources needed by anti-poaching units to counter
well-equipped, sophisticated syndicates.
While syndicates often used helicopters and hi-tech equipment,
the budget for anti-poaching units in provincial reserves had
been slashed so heavily they had to rely on private donations
even to buy diesel.
Kruger National Park
In the Kruger National Park, where 46 rhinos have been killed in
the past three months and 146 died last year, the anti-poaching
unit is better resourced and from April will be supported by the
South African National Defence Force. "But Kruger's borders are
very long and it's difficult to protect," he said.
Dropping the fence between the Kruger and Mozambique to form the
Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Park has not helped. Mozambique
has yet to convict a single rhino poacher, though several
suspects had been caught and let off the hook. Bewick's group is
a private initiative that supplies intelligence to private and
government anti-poaching units. But members of the public were
not coming forward with information about poachers, he said.
"All the enforcement agencies complain about this. Any
successful anti-poaching operation relies on good information."
The crisis was compounded by former police commissioner Jackie
Selebi's closure of the specialist endangered species protection
unit in 2002. "Experienced people moved out of the field without
handing over their skills. Selebi has a lot to answer for,"
Bewick said.
A year ago a national wildlife crime reaction unit was set up,
operating out of Kruger's main camp, Skukuza, and working with
the police organised crime unit and the National Prosecuting
Authority. Members of the unit refused requests for an
interview. This year at least 10 suspected poachers have been
killed in different parts of the country and 64 arrested. Last
year 164 were arrested.
Poaching crisis
International rhino experts gathered in Johannesburg last week
under the umbrella of the IUCN's (World Conservation Union)
species survival commission to discuss "the worst poaching
crisis in decades". They urged "greater cooperation between
wildlife investigators, police and prosecutors [and for]
magistrates and judges to be more sensitive to rhino issues".
"While the number of arrests has increased, there is an urgent
need for improved conviction rates and increased penalties for
rhino-related crimes." South Africa has about 19 400 white
rhinos and 1 678 black rhinos, with the population still growing
at between 3% and 6%.
"Although good biological management and anti-poaching efforts
have led to modest population gains, unless the rapid escalation
in poaching can be halted, continental rhino numbers could again
start to decline," said Richard Emslie, scientific officer for
the IUCN's African rhino specialist group. South Africa's white
rhino population grew from a handful captured in KwaZulu-Natal's
uMfolozi Game Reserve in the 1960s and nurtured in protected
areas by game rangers under the leadership of conservation
legend Ian Player.
When Player started his rhino project, wildlife conservation was
well supported, said Tim Snow, the Game Rangers' Association's
Africa representative. "Now we are close to losing a rhino a day
and field rangers on the ground are underfunded at a time when
their support systems should be beefed up."
Meanwhile, Dawie Groenewald, a game farmer and owner of Out of
Africa Adventurous Safaris, and 10 others will appear on rhino
poaching-related charges in the Musina Magistrate's Court on
April 11. Groenewald is alleged to head a major rhino crime
syndicate that includes veterinarians and professional hunters.
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