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Zim
'cartels' behind Hwange poaching
Jason
Moyo, Mail and Guardian (SA)
October 04, 2013
http://mg.co.za/article/2013-10-04-00-cartels-behind-hwange-poaching
Zimbabwe says
it wants to raise $40-million to fight increasingly daring poachers,
a battle that would include dealing with well-connected cartels,
poor villagers marginalised by wealthy game parks, and a parks agency
desperately short of cash and rangers.
Conservationists
accuse the government of refusing to investigate possible links
between senior government officials and wealthy ivory smuggling
cartels.
The poisoning
of at least 100 elephants in the Hwange National Park has drawn
outrage and spurred the government to pledge tougher action. Poachers
used cyanide to poison water in the park.
Environment,
Water and Climate Minister Saviour Kasukuwere told the Mail &
Guardian this week that $40-million is needed to equip rangers from
the department of national parks and wildlife, who are fighting
more sophisticated and better-armed poaching syndicates.
The government
has approached big businesses to help raise some of the funds.
Kasukuwere is
talking tough, saying he will take the fight to the doorsteps of
those behind the poaching.
Trail
to powerful interests
But it is a
trail that may lead him to powerful interests, some of them within
the government, according to many conservationists.
"Our government
knows some of those behind this," the head of one of the country’s
largest tour operators said this week, declining to be named.
"I know
for a fact names have been passed to the government, but there is
nothing being done."
Johnny Rodrigues
of the Zimbabwe
Conservation Task Force said deeper investigation is needed.
"The big
issue is that there are some bigwigs involved in poaching and this
should be thoroughly investigated," he said.
However, Kasukuwere
is cautious about launching any investigations into the possible
involvement of senior figures in the government.
"Rumour
mongering"
"We cannot
as a government respond to rumour mongering; we are much more serious
than that. We will not cast aspersions on any individuals, whoever
they are," he said this week.
Kasukuwere has
previously said, however, that the poaching ring is "a well-organised
syndicate that includes locals, middlemen and financiers based outside
the country".
Defence Minister
Sydney Sekeramayi has suggested that the army may be sent to help
fight poachers in Hwange, but Kasukuwere said that it is too early
to do this.
Kasukuwere said
the local poachers had been paid up to R700 each by an unnamed South
African buyer to slaughter the animals.
Yet some say
poaching is a result of the failure of Campfire, a wildlife management
programme forged to provide economic benefits to people living on
the edges of game reserves.
Campfire was
established by the department of national parks and wildlife, with
the support of donors.
Threat
to Campfire
Until recently,
Campfire has been successful in many areas, but illegal resettlement
in and around parks, the seizure of some conservancies, and a drop
in revenues earned by large game hunting concessions are threatening
the programme.
"People
living in communal areas adjacent to national parks should work
closely with parks authorities to fight poaching," Campfire
head Charles Jonga said.
However, critics
say the programme has not benefited those communities enough, while
wealthy Zimbabweans cream off the industry by taking over rich hunting
concessions.
At the Matetsi
Game Reserve, a three-week lion and buffalo hunting expedition costs
$52 000. An elephant hunt costs at least $30 000 and a hunter will
pay $14 500 for an elephant bull trophy.
Industry experts
say the hunting business brings in about $30-million each year.
This has made
concession owners very wealthy, but little has trickled down to
communities in the areas, and poaching syndicates find easy recruits
among the poor in the areas.
Smuggling
rings
The smuggling
rings stretch to China and Dubai, according to deputy police commissioner
general Innocent Matibiri.
"Some time
in July, a wooden artefact was flown to Dubai [from Harare] as an
unaccompanied parcel. It was discovered that there were pieces of
ivory that weighed 447kg stashed under the wooden sculpture …
It is quite obvious that this is a syndicate that involves people
in Dubai," Matibiri said.
This is not
the first poisoning of game. In 2011, animals died after poachers
poisoned water holes at the Gonarezhou, Mana Pools, Charara and
Matusadona game parks.
The Zimbabwe
Conservation Task Force claimed at the time that a group of Chinese
miners in the Mushumbi area had used poisoned bread and cabbages
to kill elephants. But the parks department said it investigated
the claims and found no evidence to back the charges.
There are also
not enough game rangers to cover Hwange, which ranges over 14 000km2.
The department
of parks and wildlife needs at least 700 rangers, but it has just
more than 100. Each ranger can be asked to cover 200m2 on their
own.
But the rangers
are ill-equipped and there are too few two-way radios. Added to
that, the poachers are often better armed than the rangers.
The manner of
the Hwange slaughter has surprised rangers, who are used to dealing
with villagers using snares and other "traditional ways of
poaching", said Caroline Washaya-Moyo, a department spokesperson.
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