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Poachers
walk free as assault on Zimbabwe rhinos escalates
WWF International
September 25, 2008
A breakdown
in law enforcement against rhino poaching and horn smuggling in
Zimbabwe is threatening the success of more than a decade's work
bringing rhino populations back up to healthy levels.
Typical of the
problem is the recent release of a gang of four Zimbabwean rhino
poachers who admitted to killing 18 rhinos in five different areas
of central Zimbabwe, including a semi-tame group of black rhinos
slaughtered in their pens at Imire Safari Ranch.
The poachers,
also alleged to have been involved in a number of armed robberies
and arrested with several illegal firearms, were initially denied
bail and it was reported that the four had received lengthy jail
sentences. However, WWF was recently informed by authorities that
the poachers were subsequently granted bail, were freed and immediately
absconded.
Rhino poaching
has been increasing throughout Zimbabwe including in the Lowveld
Conservancies in southern Zimbabwe, home to three-quarters of the
country's surviving rhinos and host to a rhino conservation project
involving WWF, the Parks and Wildlife Management Authority of Zimbabwe,
the private sector and several other conservation agencies including
the International Rhino Foundation.
"Since January 2000, approximately 70 rhinos have been killed
in the Lowveld conservancies, and the losses are now rapidly mounting,"
said Raoul du Toit, Lowveld rhino conservation project manager for
the Lowveld Conservancies. "About 20 rhinos were shot in the
Lowveld during 2008, which points to how this problem is escalating,
"Prior
to 2000, for a period of seven years, there was no rhino poaching
whatsoever."
When the poaching
first flared up, it was linked to the unplanned occupations of sections
of the Lowveld Conservancies by subsistence farmers and primarily
involved rhinos getting caught in wire snares that were set out
to catch wildlife for meat consumption.
Now the poaching
has reached commercial levels, with poachers not only killing rhinos
in sn ares but also shooting them for their horns, without taking
the meat.
"WWF and
other non-government organizations involved in rhino conservation
maintain very constructive relations with the Zimbabwean wildlife
authorities," says du Toit, "But there is growing frustration
over Zimbabwe's poor performance in law enforcement for rhino
crimes, which inevitably gives rise to concerns about corruption."
Although a few
poachers from Zambia have been arrested and convicted after cross-border
raids into National Parks in northern Zimbabwe, not a single Zimbabwean
poacher has been convicted during the current wave of internal rhino
poaching.
The few Zimbabwean
poachers arrested, have subsequently been released on bail, (equivalent
to a few American cents), and have then absconded, or have evaded
prosecution in the courts.
"The lack of enforcement and increased poaching pressure in
Zimbabwe now threaten to reverse the excellent trends in rhino populations
of recent years," said Dr Susan Lieberman, Director of WWF-International's
Species Programme. "WWF calls on the authorities in Zimbabwe
to take much stronger action against the internal poaching networks
or the recent progress made in rhino conservation in Zimbabwe will
be lost."
Tom Milliken,
the Regional Director of TRAFFIC's programme in east and southern
Africa, warns: "In terms of the CITES treaty on wildlife trade,
Zimbabwe is now in the spotlight and an international task force
will be visiting shortly to investigate its performance in rhino
conservation.
"TRAFFIC
has sponsored initiatives to improve the country's law enforcement
capabilities, but sadly most investigations appear to have collapsed
without successful prosecutions."
Notes to editors:
- WWF has
been working to conserve rhinos for over 40 years. The current
African Rhino Programme, launched in 1997, provides technical
and financial support to 12 rhino conservation projects across
Africa and operates in partnerships with key African rhino range
states. Detailed information is available at www.panda.org/species.
- TRAFFIC,
the wildlife trade monitoring network, works to ensure that trade
in wild plants and animals is not a threat to the conservation
of nature. TRAFFIC is a joint programme of WWF and IUCN - The
International Union for the Conservation of Nature.
- CITES is
the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of
Wild Fauna and Flora. With 173 member governments worldwide, CITES
is the largest wildlife conservation treaty in the world. All
species of rhinoceros are listed on the CITES appendices.
- In 1997,
there were an estimated 8,450 white rhinos and 2,600 black rhinos
remaining in the wild. Today, there are 14,500 white rhinos and
nearly 4,000 of the more endangered black rhinos. Recent conservation
progress led to expansion of both species of African rhinos in
the Lowveld region, to current totals of 400 black rhinos and
150 white rhinos. (In Zimbabwe as a whole there are 500 black
rhinos and 300 white rhinos).
- Rhinos bear
distinctive nasal horns, which are formed from a compression of
keratin, melanin and calcium, a substance akin to hair or fingernails
that continues to grow during the lifetime of the animal. Rhino
horns continued to be used illegally in traditional medicines
in Asia and as a carving material for fashioning handles for traditional
daggers in Yemen. In traditional Asian medicines, rhino horn is
not used as an aphrodisiac, but rather in conjunction with other
substances to reduce fever. As a commodity, rhino horn is not
worth its weight in gold, a notion that stimulates poaching and
corruption, but remains untrue.
Further information:
Sarah Janicke tel: 41 22 364 9250, email: sjanicke@wwfint.org,
Tom Milliken, tel: +263 4 252533 / 34, email: milliken@wwfsarpo.org,
Richard Thomas, tel: +44 1223 279068, email richard.thomas@traffic.org
About WWF
* WWF is one of the world's largest and most respected independent
conservation organizations, with almost 5 million supporters and
a global network active in over 100 countries. WWF's mission is
to stop the degradation of the earth's natural environment and to
build a future in which humans live in harmony with nature, by conserving
the world's biological diversity, ensuring that the use of renewable
natural.
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