Elephant Management and Poaching in African Countries

Discussion on Elephant Management and poaching topics
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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)

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Spooks implicated in Botswana’s mysterious ivory stockpile

Kago Komane, Joel Konopo17 Jul 2018 00:00

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Botswana’s intelligence agency has been accused of using its anti-poaching operation to conceal elephant tusks from the responsible government department, potentially using it as a conduit for ivory smuggling.

This comes after the department of wildlife and national parks’ anti-poaching unit raided a storage facility at a directorate of intelligence and security services (DISS) camp in Ngwashe, near Nata village in northern Botswana, allegedly finding a large stockpile of elephant tusks.

Highly placed departmental sources told INK that the department was unaware of the stockpile at Ngwashe until last week and that the DISS could not explain why it kept such a large number of tusks in a warehouse in the bush, as this was not standard procedure.

They said the DISS officer at the scene could not account for the stockpile and told wildlife department officials that questions should be directed to Isaac Kgosi, the former DISS head who was sacked earlier this year.

The sources said the wildlife department has refused to take over the tusks without a proper inventory. The department wants to know how the DISS was able to collect so much ivory without its knowledge and where the agency got it from.

According to wildlife officers, the correct procedure is that the DISS must first report to the department how and where it obtained each tusk.

Botswana takes a tough line on poaching and smuggling of animal products, and follows an unwritten shoot to kill policy with poachers. The Wildlife Conservation and National Parks Act carries a fine of 50 000 pula (R64 750) or a 10-year jail sentence for possession of ivory.

The wildlife department falls under former president Ian Khama’s younger brother, Tshekedi Khama.

The DISS underwent an abrupt change of leadership after Botswana’s new president, Mokgweetsi Masisi, fired its founding director-general, Isaac Kgosi, in May this year and replaced him with Brigadier Peter Magosi.

According to a source, the raid on the Ngwashe facility would not have been possible without the support of senior DISS officials, who have called for reforms at the spy agency.

Kgosi is alleged to have set up an illegal anti-poaching unit in parallel with the wildlife department’s unit. Department officials complain that the DISS overstepped its authority and that its anti-poaching outfit “gets in the way” of their operations.

There have also been rumours that the DISS unit was set up to smuggle ivory and launder money out of the country.

The media reported last year that the agency had been on the radar of the Wildlife Intelligence Unit for some time following a tip-off that it was part of an international diamond and ivory smuggling racket.

In mid-2016 three DISS agents were reported to have been arrested by the Wildlife Intelligence Unit at a roadblock in Makalamabedi, central Botswana, with elephant tusks cut into small pieces inside a sports bag.

The Sunday Standard alleged that information gathered by the unit suggested that agency officials had been smuggling ivory and diamonds out of the country in their Pilatus PC-12 aircraft as diplomatic cargo, which enjoys immunity from search or seizure.

The DISS was seen as the personal fiefdom of Kgosi, who was formerly the private secretary of Ian Khama and enjoyed his protection over a 10-year period as the agency’s head.

Kgosi refused to comment on the claims relating to the Ngwashe stockpile, saying he no longer works for government. “Go and ask relevant authorities,” he said.

When he took over, Magosi, the former boss of Military Intelligence, publicly promised to change the DISS’s “old culture” of impunity.

This week he confirmed that the agency has a storeroom full of elephant tusks at its Ngwashe camp, but insisted that there is nothing unusual about this.

“Sometimes elephants just die,” he said. Under a standing arrangement, the DISS anti-poaching unit often picked up tusks while on patrol in the bush, transported them to the Ngwashe camp and made arrangements for game rangers falling under the wildlife department to collect them.

“The tusks are recorded on a daily basis and we report any new finds to DISS headquarters. When the time is right we hand over the tusks to the department of wildlife and record the transfer.”

Both the department of wildlife and the DISS refused to make available the guidelines applied in such cases.

When INK put it to him that the department of wildlife and national parks was not aware of the stockpile until last week, Magosi suggested that INK might have asked the wrong officials.

He said he had already notified the wildlife department of the stockpile and assured them that the tusks would be transferred to them. He declined to reveal the quantity of ivory in the DISS’s possession.

However, the permanent secretary in the ministry of environment, wildlife and tourism, Thato Raphaka, disputed this.

Raphaka said he was not aware that the DISS has a storeroom full of elephant tusks at its camp in the wilds of northern Botswana, and that is not how the matter is normally dealt with.

The ministry is responsible for keeping records of all ivory storage facilities in Botswana.

“While that area [of the Ngwashe camp] is under the DISS,” he said, “they have a responsibility to notify us every time they find such things as elephant tusks and hand them over. That is the procedure.

“We do not know anything about [the stockpile] and I am sure we would have been briefed about it … It is not procedure to keep such a large stock of elephant tusks and not report on it.”

He noted the department regularly checks with the DISS to see if they have anything for them. “There is no smoke without fire,” Thato said. “Where we feel there is an issue, we will always address it.”

Kgosi established the DISS in 2008 with a vague mandate and without proper channels of accountability.

Late last year, the agency was accused by Botswana’s corruption watchdog, the Directorate on Corruption and Economic Crime, of diverting public funds intended for fuel levy to the acquisition of military grade equipment, supposedly for use in the fight against poaching.

An amount of 118-million pula was paid to an Israeli technology firm, Dignia Systems, for the acquisition of the equipment.

*This story was produced by the INK Centre for Investigative Journalism in Botswana, in association with the amaBhungane Centre for Investigative Journalism.


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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)

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WATCH: Espionage in the service of animals in Kenya
2018-09-08 11:43
5m 50s

Kenya: Espionage in the service of animals

Poaching is a global industry. Poachers often form networks much like militant groups. Faye Cuevas used to work for the US military, fighting militants. She's now using her expertise to protect Kenya's elephant population from poachers.



https://www.news24.com/Green/News/kenya ... s-20180908


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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)

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WATCH: Conservationists in Tanzania use tech platform to protect endangered species

10.10.2018

In a Tanzanian game reserve ivory poachers have been put on notice, thanks to new technology designed to protect one of the world's most endangered species.

As David Pollard reports, Earth Ranger was developed by US philanthropist and Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen and technologists from his company Vulcan Inc.


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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)

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Domain Awareness System (DAS) Provides Real-Time Tools to Protect Threatened Species

phpBB [video]


Responding to the elephant poaching crisis illustrated in 2016’s Great Elephant Census (GEC), philanthropist Paul G. Allen and his team of technologists and conservation experts are partnering with park managers across Africa to provide a new technology platform to better protect this iconic species and other wildlife threatened by human activities.

The Domain Awareness System (DAS) is a tool that aggregates the positions of radios, vehicles, aircraft and animal sensors to provide users a real-time depiction of the wildlife being protected, the people and resources protecting them, and the potential illegal activity threatening them. The visualization and analysis capabilities of DAS make it possible for park managers to make immediate tactical decisions and efficiently deploy limited resources for interdiction and active management.

The system has been deployed at six protected wildlife conservation sites since last November. Working with Save the Elephants, African Parks Network, Wildlife Conservation Society, and the Singita Grumeti Fund as well as the Lewa Conservancy and Northern Rangelands Trust, a total of 15 locations are expected to adopt the system this year.

To learn more, visit http://www.vulcan.com/areas-of-practi...


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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)

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^Q^


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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)

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More and more people are taking the poaching seriously now ^Q^ ^Q^


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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)

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Face Book Bravo Romeo Aviation Services
5 hrs
Bravo Romeo Aviation Services and African Parks provided air support during British Military conservation mentorship deployments in Malawi.

Bravo Romeo provided training to British troops which involved the use of light civilian helicopters during conservation law enforcement operations.

Designated Project Beekeeper, British Army troops were deployed alongside African Parks rangers who continue to safeguard Malawi's wildlife.

These conservation deployments allow for the open transferal of training, experience and mentorship between Malawian rangers and British soldiers.

Always a pleasure working alongside these highly skilled men and women.
43614918_732575253760634_3622833218010480640_n.jpg
43749130_732575293760630_6124908966536282112_n.jpg


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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)

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Excellent! Locals are terrified of internationals, SA should also do this! :yes:


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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)

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^Q^


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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)

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Watched this last night....and cried!! :-( :-(

phpBB [video]


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