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Outcry
over capture of wild elephants
Mike
Cadman, The Sunday Independent (SA)
November
12, 2006
http://www.sundayindependent.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=3532646
During the capture
operation in the 14 000 square kilometre Hwange National Park, game-capture
specialists working for Victoria Falls-based tourism operator Shearwater
Adventures isolated 12 elephants from family groups, darted the
animals and removed them to holding bomas to be trained for use
in captivity.
The capture
flies in the face of the International
Conservation Union (IUCN) and African Elephant Specialist Group
(AfESG) recommendations that no wild elephants should be captured
for use in captivity. The AfESG recommendation is endorsed by the
South African-based Elephant Managers and Owners Association (Emoa)
and increasing number of scientists, and local and international
animal welfare groups, which say removing animals from family groups
is psychologically damaging to both the captured animals and the
wild herds and that training of elephants is inherently cruel.
Allen Roberts,
the chief executive officer of Shearwater, said that the capture
team involved was "highly respected" and while the capture was undertaken
for commercial reasons it also helped relieve pressure on elephant
populations in the park.
"Shearwater
specifically targeted young elephants that were displaying evidence
of deterioration and which we believed we could help resuscitate,"
Roberts said.
"Twelve animals
have now been translocated to Victoria Falls. Sadly one elephant
did not survive the translocation."
He said that
the elephant-back safari in Zimbabwe, and one near Victoria Falls
in Zambia, employed more than 200 people and brought about $2 million
(about R15 million) to the regional economy.
Glynis Vaughan,
the chief inspector of the Zimbabwe
National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ZimNSPCA),
said that her organisation was outraged by the capture of the elephants
and would approach the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority
to request that no further captures be permitted.
"What is happening
to these animals is horrendous. We are definitely going to prosecute..
Jason Bell-Leask,
the southern African director of the United States-based International
Fund for Animal Welfare (Ifaw), condemned both the capture of wild
elephants and the use of the animals in the elephant-back safari
industry.
"It is disgraceful
and a shame that any country or organisation is prepared to sanction
the abuses inherent in capturing wild elephants and subjecting them
to lives in captivity," Bell-Leask said.
Elephant-back
safaris are conducted by a number of operators in Zimbabwe, South
Africa, Zambia and Botswana.
At present no
elephant culling is undertaken in any of these countries and young
elephants are highly sought after by the industry.
The first elephant-back
safaris in South Africa were started five years ago and about 100
elephants are used by the industry.
Elephant safari
operators say that no cruelty is involved in training elephants
and most use the "reward" system of training that entails offering
the animals food when they obey commands.
Those opposed
to the industry say that training elephants is cruel and that the
huge animals also pose a danger to handlers and tourists alike.
In South Africa
two handlers have been killed, at least two visitors have been injured
and at least one elephant has been put down because its owners felt
it was a danger to humans.
The training
of elephants in South Africa is largely unregulated except for provisions
of the Animal Cruelty Act and the Performing Animals Protection
Act and the industry is coming under increasing scrutiny by conservation
authorities. This month conservation officials from all provinces
requested the department of environmental affairs and tourism to
issue a directive prohibiting the capture of elephants for use in
captivity.
The provincial
authorities said that "the removal of wild elephants for captivity
is of no/little value to conservation and carries significant risks.
It is not considered a humane alternative to culling".
Leseho Sello,
the chief director of Biodiversity and Culture at the environment
department, said this week: "[The department] can't make an overriding
decision on the matter; it is a provincial issue. The minister [Marthinus
van Schalkwyk] is not in a legal position to take that action."
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