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Two
white rhinos shot and killed in Zim
Alex
Bell, SW Radio Africa
November 08, 2013
http://www.swradioafrica.com/2013/11/08/two-white-rhinos-shot-and-killed-in-zim/
The poaching
crisis in Zimbabwe continues to intensify, with the shooting and
dehorning of two white rhinos in the protected Matopos National
Park.
The carcasses
were discovered on Thursday, according to the Zimbabwe Conservation
Task Force.
The Zimbabwe
Parks Authority (ZimParks) has not yet confirmed the shooting.
But according
to the Task Force
chairman, Johnny Rodrigues, the animals were found on Thursday morning,
both with their horns removed.
Rhino horn holds
huge value for poachers, who sell the horns on to mainly Eastern
buyers for tens of thousands of dollars. In nations like China,
Vietnam and Laos rhino horn is believed to have healing or aphrodisiac
properties, and the demand for horn has seen the animals being poached
to dangerously low levels.
In South Africa
alone, the number of rhinos killed for their horns is close to 800
since January this year. And in West Africa, the wild black rhino
has officially been listed as extinct this week.
The poaching
crisis in Zimbabwe has been making international news headlines,
after the mass poisoning of elephants in the Hwange National Park.
ZimParks has
said that 100 elephants have died as a result of the poisoning,
by way of the toxic cyanide chemical that was used to lace salt
licks in Hwange. Nine people have been arrested since the first
carcasses of poisoned elephants were found in late August.
Rodrigues said
on Friday that more elephant carcasses have been discovered this
week, according to his sources. The Task Force claims that more
than 300 elephants have died since July as a result of cyanide
poisoning.
“More
elephants have died in Hwange, so this is a big issue and this is
getting out of hand. We have an investigator up there, but every
time we send someone in, they get kicked out. There is a shutdown
on information coming out,” Rodrigues said.
Rodrigues has
previously said there is a ‘clampdown’ on information
leaving the park, claiming a ‘cover up operation’ is
underway to protect government officials allegedly linked to poaching
syndicates.
Environment
Minister Saviour Kasukuwere recently set up a six member Wildlife
Ecological Trust as part of government efforts to support conservation
and ant-poaching mechanisms in the country.
But Rodrigues
said that a lack of political will and a failure to “make
good on promises to the community,” meant the poaching crisis
was likely to keep getting worse.
“The community
can still make more than what was promised them by getting involved
in poaching, because those promises by government were never kept.
The political will is also not there and there are a lot of cover
ups on the ground, because the greed has taken over and there’s
a lot of money involved,” Rodrigues said.
In the elephant
poaching saga, all the arrested individuals have been local community
members said to be working for poaching syndicates. ZimParks rangers
have meanwhile been accused of using torture and assault against
some villagers in Tsholotsho, after they were accused being involved
in the poaching.
SW Radio
Africa is Zimbabwe's Independent Voice and broadcasts on Short Wave
4880 KHz in the 60m band.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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