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http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/Power-struggle-in-rhino-poaching-fight-20120126
Power struggle in rhino
poaching fight
2012-01-26 19:15
Cape Town - There is a power struggle between national
government, provincial departments and some private rhino owners
in the fight against poaching, Parliament's environmental
affairs committee heard on Thursday.
"We'll propose things but somehow they are not getting through
because of this domain issue between national and provinces,"
the environmental affairs department's deputy director-general
Fundisile Mketeni said in a submission to public hearings by the
committee.
"In our view... you want a central command. You want to be able
to talk to a provincial official at a national level; you tell
him what to do."
Committee chairperson Johnny de Lange said it was unacceptable
to say certain rhino strategies were being blocked by
individuals, departments, laws and regulations.
"If the provinces are not doing it properly and if it's a
question of a species dying then there may be some instances
where the power will be better served at a central level; and
the Constitution allows for that," he said.
"I never want to hear the department telling me this again, that
you can't do this and you can't do that. We cannot hide behind
the technicalities of it.
"You are busy seeing a species die. It's not going to happen
under our watch. Simple. It's not going to happen. Government
has to man up to this."
De Lange took issue with the fact that the department did not
know the number of rhino horns in private stockpiles. He said if
the law did not allow for officials to find out these numbers,
it was the department's fault for not approaching Parliament to
suggest a new law.
A total of 448 rhinos were poached in 2011. In January this
year, 28 rhinos had been poached so far.
The department estimated that 398 rhinos would be killed by the
end of the year.
Mketeni said the illegal trade of rhino horns was worth an
estimated $20bn annually, and was ranked the third most
lucrative criminal trade in the world, behind drugs and human
trafficking.
- SAPA
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