Elephant Management and Poaching in African Countries
- Flutterby
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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)
Just a reminder that "Saving Africa's Giants with Yao Ming" is airing tonight on Animal Planet.
- Lisbeth
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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)
Depravity combined with too much money is lethal
In this case unfortunately for the elephants......if it is true, as Toko asks.

"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." Nelson Mandela
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge
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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)
Elephant poaching epidemic prompts objections of $450 million aid to Tanzania
WASHINGTON, DC - The Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) today appealed to Secretary of State John Kerry and Dana J. Hyde, the Chair and CEO of the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), to defer approval of additional aid funding of up to $450 million until Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete takes action against the corruption and criminal syndicates behind the nation's massive elephant poaching epidemic and its large scale smuggling of poached ivory to China.
The objection by the non-profit EIA is based on a year-long study of Tanzania's poaching epidemic, published last month in a new report, Vanishing Point – Corruption, Criminality and the Destruction of Tanzania's Elephants. Tanzania has the highest level of elephant slaughter of any country in Africa and is the largest exporter of poached ivory smuggled to China, the world's largest consumer of illegal ivory. Smuggling of poached ivory by members of the entourage travelling on the Chinese president's planes during two state visits in 2013 and 2011 were revealed in EIA's report.
The Board of the MCC, which funds international development projects, will meet today in Washington to discuss a second major grant, known as a "compact," to Tanzania worth approximately $450 million. The previous MCC five-year compact ending in 2013 gave $698 million to Tanzania to build roads along the Kenyan border and rebuild the electricity grid in regions of mainland Tanzania and on Zanzibar.
In Tanzania's famous Selous Game Reserve, the elephant population has declined from 38,975 in 2009 to only 13,084 in 2013, a 67 percent drop in just four years. In July 2013, President Obama announced his Executive Order on Combating Wildlife Trafficking Crime during his state visit to Tanzania.
Elephant poaching threatens Tanzania's billion dollar-a-year tourism industry. A recent USAID report noted that tourism employs almost 1.2 million people in Tanzania and is the largest source of foreign currency for Tanzania.
"Although 10,000 elephants are being poached every year in Tanzania, the MCC gave Tanzania a 99.9 percent rating for 'Natural Resource Protection'," said Allan Thornton, President of EIA. "The MCC must require Tanzanian government action against the criminal syndicates behind the poached ivory trade or the same roads MCC funded could facilitate smuggling of ivory to China."
http://www.eturbonews.com/53473/elephan ... ion-aid-ta
WASHINGTON, DC - The Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) today appealed to Secretary of State John Kerry and Dana J. Hyde, the Chair and CEO of the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), to defer approval of additional aid funding of up to $450 million until Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete takes action against the corruption and criminal syndicates behind the nation's massive elephant poaching epidemic and its large scale smuggling of poached ivory to China.
The objection by the non-profit EIA is based on a year-long study of Tanzania's poaching epidemic, published last month in a new report, Vanishing Point – Corruption, Criminality and the Destruction of Tanzania's Elephants. Tanzania has the highest level of elephant slaughter of any country in Africa and is the largest exporter of poached ivory smuggled to China, the world's largest consumer of illegal ivory. Smuggling of poached ivory by members of the entourage travelling on the Chinese president's planes during two state visits in 2013 and 2011 were revealed in EIA's report.
The Board of the MCC, which funds international development projects, will meet today in Washington to discuss a second major grant, known as a "compact," to Tanzania worth approximately $450 million. The previous MCC five-year compact ending in 2013 gave $698 million to Tanzania to build roads along the Kenyan border and rebuild the electricity grid in regions of mainland Tanzania and on Zanzibar.
In Tanzania's famous Selous Game Reserve, the elephant population has declined from 38,975 in 2009 to only 13,084 in 2013, a 67 percent drop in just four years. In July 2013, President Obama announced his Executive Order on Combating Wildlife Trafficking Crime during his state visit to Tanzania.
Elephant poaching threatens Tanzania's billion dollar-a-year tourism industry. A recent USAID report noted that tourism employs almost 1.2 million people in Tanzania and is the largest source of foreign currency for Tanzania.
"Although 10,000 elephants are being poached every year in Tanzania, the MCC gave Tanzania a 99.9 percent rating for 'Natural Resource Protection'," said Allan Thornton, President of EIA. "The MCC must require Tanzanian government action against the criminal syndicates behind the poached ivory trade or the same roads MCC funded could facilitate smuggling of ivory to China."
http://www.eturbonews.com/53473/elephan ... ion-aid-ta
"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." Nelson Mandela
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge
- Richprins
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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)
China are also building roads there?
Anyway, good to let dollars talk!

Anyway, good to let dollars talk!

Please check Needs Attention pre-booking: https://africawild-forum.com/viewtopic.php?f=322&t=596
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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)
The Peace Parks Foundation says on its website that Africa loses 4 elephants an HOUR!!! 

God put me on earth to accomplish a certain amount of things. Right now I'm so far behind that I'll never die.
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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)



Kgalagadi lover… for ever
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- Flutterby
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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)
Anti-poaching drive cripples ivory syndicates
Sunday, 05 April 2015 04:00
Written by KILASA MTAMBALIKE
FOLLOWING the success of a covert anti-poaching operation, dubbed Spider Net and the arrest of some of the big traders in ivory, it is feared that the syndicates may try setting up new operations in northern Tanzania, as southern Tanzania is becoming ‘too hot’ to operate in.
Operation Spider Net, as expected, yielded meaningful impact on the illegal ivory syndicates in Tanzania and will have crippled several of them, sources close to the operation told the ‘Sunday News.’
According to the sources, some are believed to have started moving to northern Mozambique, with some of their ammunition having been intercepted at Mtwara.
The sources added that several have moved their field operations and some trade routes, thus the need to keep up the pressure in Ruaha, Katavi and Selous ecosystems but, most importantly, launch similar operations in the north of the country.
However, it is believed that poaching isn’t as rife in national parks and games reserves in the Northern circuit as compared to the Southern parts of the country.
Poverty and ignorance among locals living in areas surrounding national parks and game reserves are believed to be the major causes for continued poaching of wild animals in the country, the sources said.
As a result, covert intelligence-led operations to protect elephants and halt large-scale poaching in Katavi Region have started yielding positive results, compliments to a fresh approach which also involves educating residents on dangers they pose to themselves, the nation and the environment
.A source close to the team operating in the field said that the new approach has helped in making people understand the extent of the problem of poaching and the importance of the anti-poaching drive.
“Most of those who take part in poaching in the field are people who live around the game reserves and national parks and they do so for very meagre pay which cannot sustain them long enough.
Thus they keep doing it for money,” he said. Contrary to previous operations that sparked controversy and led to the resignation of some senior government officials, operation Spider Net focuses more on identifying syndicates and arresting and prosecuting as many of their members as possible.
A recent report availed to the ‘Sunday News’ shows that the operation has been so successful that there are more than 40 cases pending in court which involve financiers of the syndicates.
The current operation differs from previous ones for a manifold of reasons. It is carried out by the National and Transnational Serious Crimes Investigation Unit (Task Force) which has carved itself a niche for integrity.
The task force is under the auspices of the police force and made up of members from various government agencies including the Tanzania Intelligence and Security Services (TISS), Tanzania People’s Defence Forces (TPDF), Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA), Tanzania Prisons Department, Immigration Department and the Wildlife Department.
In the course of the operation, which started in mid January, this year, the task force established that the core issue behind wide-scale poaching was ignorance and poverty among people living in areas near game reserves and national parks.
As such, the task force has been able to set up a network of informers among the ranks of poachers who were unaware of the extent of damage they were causing for very little pay and risking their lives while in the field.
According to the report, the syndicates involved in poaching are financed by a single or a few individuals who themselves do not take part in the killing of animals, but simply facilitate the exercise from behind the scenes.
Teams of 70 to 100 people go into the field to undertake poaching. The teams are normally made up of a reconnaissance composed of 10 people and 5 weapons; a killing team (navigator, shooter, cooks, porters, tusk removers, etc.) involving 50 to 70 people and 15 weapons and a rear guard composed of 10 people and 5 weapons.
They can spend up to three weeks in the field before they are successful and return with trophies. The success recorded by the operation was evident early on; 95 suspects were arrested in the first 18 hours of operation (with no injuries); 7 firearms and 694 rounds of ammunition seized and 2 vehicles and 1 bus were seized.
During the operation, a large Free Pentecostal Church was found to be involved in coordinating, storing and transporting of ivory and arms (weapon manuals were found) and two pastors were arrested but were later released and are now under surveillance.
Sunday, 05 April 2015 04:00
Written by KILASA MTAMBALIKE
FOLLOWING the success of a covert anti-poaching operation, dubbed Spider Net and the arrest of some of the big traders in ivory, it is feared that the syndicates may try setting up new operations in northern Tanzania, as southern Tanzania is becoming ‘too hot’ to operate in.
Operation Spider Net, as expected, yielded meaningful impact on the illegal ivory syndicates in Tanzania and will have crippled several of them, sources close to the operation told the ‘Sunday News.’
According to the sources, some are believed to have started moving to northern Mozambique, with some of their ammunition having been intercepted at Mtwara.
The sources added that several have moved their field operations and some trade routes, thus the need to keep up the pressure in Ruaha, Katavi and Selous ecosystems but, most importantly, launch similar operations in the north of the country.
However, it is believed that poaching isn’t as rife in national parks and games reserves in the Northern circuit as compared to the Southern parts of the country.
Poverty and ignorance among locals living in areas surrounding national parks and game reserves are believed to be the major causes for continued poaching of wild animals in the country, the sources said.
As a result, covert intelligence-led operations to protect elephants and halt large-scale poaching in Katavi Region have started yielding positive results, compliments to a fresh approach which also involves educating residents on dangers they pose to themselves, the nation and the environment
.A source close to the team operating in the field said that the new approach has helped in making people understand the extent of the problem of poaching and the importance of the anti-poaching drive.
“Most of those who take part in poaching in the field are people who live around the game reserves and national parks and they do so for very meagre pay which cannot sustain them long enough.
Thus they keep doing it for money,” he said. Contrary to previous operations that sparked controversy and led to the resignation of some senior government officials, operation Spider Net focuses more on identifying syndicates and arresting and prosecuting as many of their members as possible.
A recent report availed to the ‘Sunday News’ shows that the operation has been so successful that there are more than 40 cases pending in court which involve financiers of the syndicates.
The current operation differs from previous ones for a manifold of reasons. It is carried out by the National and Transnational Serious Crimes Investigation Unit (Task Force) which has carved itself a niche for integrity.
The task force is under the auspices of the police force and made up of members from various government agencies including the Tanzania Intelligence and Security Services (TISS), Tanzania People’s Defence Forces (TPDF), Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA), Tanzania Prisons Department, Immigration Department and the Wildlife Department.
In the course of the operation, which started in mid January, this year, the task force established that the core issue behind wide-scale poaching was ignorance and poverty among people living in areas near game reserves and national parks.
As such, the task force has been able to set up a network of informers among the ranks of poachers who were unaware of the extent of damage they were causing for very little pay and risking their lives while in the field.
According to the report, the syndicates involved in poaching are financed by a single or a few individuals who themselves do not take part in the killing of animals, but simply facilitate the exercise from behind the scenes.
Teams of 70 to 100 people go into the field to undertake poaching. The teams are normally made up of a reconnaissance composed of 10 people and 5 weapons; a killing team (navigator, shooter, cooks, porters, tusk removers, etc.) involving 50 to 70 people and 15 weapons and a rear guard composed of 10 people and 5 weapons.
They can spend up to three weeks in the field before they are successful and return with trophies. The success recorded by the operation was evident early on; 95 suspects were arrested in the first 18 hours of operation (with no injuries); 7 firearms and 694 rounds of ammunition seized and 2 vehicles and 1 bus were seized.
During the operation, a large Free Pentecostal Church was found to be involved in coordinating, storing and transporting of ivory and arms (weapon manuals were found) and two pastors were arrested but were later released and are now under surveillance.
- Lisbeth
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Re: Elephant Poaching in Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ...)
They sound very organized



"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." Nelson Mandela
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge