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http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-courts/wild-animal-carcass-horror-1.1022810
Wild animal carcass horror
February 8 2011 at 07:42am
By Graeme Hosken
Horrific scenes of mutilated and frozen wild animal carcasses
greeted police when they raided a wholesaler dealership and a
farm while searching for members of a multi-million-rand theft
syndicate outside Pretoria.
The Hawks, wildlife officials and the Green Scorpions made the
grisly discovery while searching for the gang members in
Ga-Rankuwa.
The gang is allegedly behind the theft of millions of rands’
worth of fresh produce from Shoprite Checkers.
The discovery - first made on Friday with further finds on
Monday - came when police raided a farm near Dr George Mukhari
Hospital.
Police, who arrested the owner
of the wholesaler on Friday along with 15 of his alleged
accomplices, were searching the dealership’s cold storage
facilities for Shoprite Checkers products.
But they then discovered the frozen and skinned carcasses of a
domestic cat, a zebra and other wild animals, such as
crocodiles, lying across the floor and on shelves next to the
mutilated remains of farm animals.
While searching the premises and a neighbouring farm - also
owned by the wholesaler - officers discovered 200 baby
crocodiles, some measuring more than 1m in length, crammed on
top of each other in several small dams.
During the searches on Monday police also found numerous
carcasses of endangered wild animals, skins, bones and other
body parts.
Police were, however, left
red-faced when officers who returned on Monday with journalists
to show them the discoveries, found that of the 200 crocodiles
they had seen on Friday, only 20 remained.
Fears emerged that the crocodiles could have been shot and
buried.
Three large fresh graves were found near their holding
facilities, along with numerous shotgun casings. Farm workers
told investigators that two bakkies had been used to remove the
live crocodiles, whose fate, police said, was as yet unknown.
Macabre and foul-smelling
scenes greeted journalists as they were shown the cold storage
facilities at the wholesalers.
The carcasses of baby crocodiles, which are believed to have
frozen to death after being placed in plastic crates, were found
next to cut-up remains of wild and farm animals, with blood
smeared across the floors.
In a storage room at the back of the wholesaler dealership,
dozens of dried crocodile skins, heads and other animal parts
were found stuffed inside boxes and crates.
Police at the scene said they
believed that the owners could be part of a larger wild meat
trading syndicate.
Makoko Lekola, Gauteng Agricultural and Rural Development
Department spokesman, said that so far, five frozen crocodiles,
along with spotted genets and numerous skins of adult crocodiles
and other protected wildlife, had been found.
He said the department was
assisting the police in their investigation, especially when it
came to establishing where the animals came from.
Hawks spokesman McIntosh Polela said the findings were alarming.
“The scenes that greeted us on Friday were far worse than today.
“They were beyond description.
It was appalling, horrific,” he said, describing how they had
found a skinned cat strung up in the cold storage room.
Polela said the police had not been prepared for the
discoveries.
“We were expecting to arrest
thieves belonging to a syndicate targeting the Shoprite Checkers
food chain store; definitely not this,” he said.
He said, based on information from their investigations, they
were looking into allegations that the meat of the wild animals,
such as the crocodiles and possibly a number of endangered wild
animals and domestic ones, were being sold to unsuspecting local
residents in the area as lamb, beef or chicken.
“We strongly believe that these
people are involved in the illegal meat trade industry.
“We are investigating whether they could be linked to illegal
poaching syndicates, with possible ties to international crime
organisations,” he said.
Polela said that one of their
biggest concerns was why there were so many wild animals like
crocodiles on the premises.
Also, what the purpose was for storing the animals on the farm,
and what had happened to the more than 180 crocodiles which had
disappeared.
“We are concerned about their well-being.
“Added to these fears are the shotgun cartridges which were
found near where the crocodiles had been contained,” he said. -
Pretoria News
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