Rhino Poaching 2014

Information & discussion on the Rhino Poaching Pandemic
Twigga
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2014

Post by Twigga »

\O Dewi

O/


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Twigga
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2014

Post by Twigga »

O/ O/ O/ 0*\ 0*\ 0*\

http://rhinoypointerns.com/2014/02/26/r ... ife-trade/

Rhinos: Why did South Africa skip a vital conference on illegal wildlife trade?
Posted on February 26, 2014 by Rhino YPO Interns

In London last week international media scrambled to cover the high-level and much anticipated international conference on illegal wildlife trade.

However, there was one notable absentee. South Africa’s absence at the conference and non-participation in the signing of the London Declaration are raising serious concerns regarding its commitment to ending the onslaught on its rhinos.Conservationists and South African taxpayers want answers!

The London Summit was hosted by the British government and led by Prime Minister David Cameron, Foreign Secretary William Hague, Prince Charles and his son William, the Duke of Cambridge. More than 40 countries and 4 Presidents from Africa attended. Participants, including end-user countries China, Laos, Vietnam and Nepal signed a declaration aimed at eradicating illegal trade in wildlife products. The London Declaration urges practical steps to end the illegal trade in ivory, rhino horn, tiger parts and that of other wildlife. Some very powerful people who gathered in central London have now signed this commitment, but not South Africa!

The African elephants’ plight was a key focus, with nearly 50 000 (one every 15 minutes) slaughtered each year due to demand for ivory in Asia, particularly in China. It is estimated that there are less than 400 000 elephants left in Africa. Demand for rhino horn in Vietnam and China has seen 2453 rhinos killed in South Africa over the last 4 years, where more than 80 percent of the world’s rhino populations live. Less than 25 000 remain worldwide and if the current poaching trends continue, both elephants and rhino in the wild will become extinct in the next 10 to 15 years.

Seventeen African states are signatories to the London Declaration, including Mozambique (where rhinos are now extinct and from where the majority of poaching incursions into Kruger National Park take place). At the conference, the governments of Botswana, Chad, Ethiopia, Gabon and Tanzania signed an Elephant Protection Initiative – to put their ivory stockpiles beyond economic use and to observe a moratorium on any future trade for at least 10 years.

This implores the question why South Africa’s Minister of Environmental Affairs, Edna Molewa was not present. In President Zuma’s State of the Nation address last week (which event is no excuse for South Africa’s absence from the conference), he highlighted tourism as one of 5 key areas for job creation and economic growth. The survival of the Big 5 is a key component of job creation and influx of foreign exchange in safari tourism. Does the absence of South Africa in London last week perhaps underscore conflicting views between South Africa and other African nations on rhino and ivory trade?

Is SA so committed to serving the narrow self interest of a few powerful private rhino owners that it is prepared to chance becoming isolated from the rest of the world? Considering that the Swedish and Dutch Postcode lotteries donated R232 million for rhino conservation a week ago, it is rather an embarrassing moment for all South Africans that the country was so conspicuously absent at the conference and failed to sign the London Declaration.

While conservationists from outside SA seem to be coalescing around non-trade initiatives, with the five Asian range states reaffirming their support for the international ban on rhino horn trade in October 2013, South Africa remains split into two camps. The pro-trade lobbyists, supported by the South African government, deem rhino horn trade as the Holy Grail for funding of rhino conservation. In order to achieve this, Minister Edna Molewa will apply to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) in 2016 to legitimise trade in rhino horn, risking severe damage to our international reputation when the bid fails, as fail it must.

Yet, in recent weeks we have seen the international community do the opposite: they have chosen to destroy their ivory stockpiles as a message against trade. Today the Tanzanian president announced the decision to destroy his country’s ivory stockpile, while Chad’s Environment Minister announced last week that Chad would also destroy its entire stockpile of ivory on February 20, following in the footsteps of Gabon, Philippines, USA, China and France. Hong Kong has also committed to destroy 28 tons of confiscated ivory. At the same conference the US announced a comprehensive ban on the sale of ivory in the US, the worlds second biggest ivory market.

By most accounts, the last CITES ivory sale in 2008, when 108 tons were sold to China and Japan, has been a failure as it fueled demand. With China now becoming the world’s leading consumer of both legal and illegal ivory, the price has skyrocketed from $153/kg to about $2000/kg. These sales have given the illegal ivory traders a route to market as it is extremely difficult to differentiate legally held ivory from illegal supplies. Since these sales, elephant-poaching has increased siginifcantly with the species now threatended with extinction in numerous countries, the same is likely to happen to rhino should SA’s trade bid be successful.

With the plight of the rhino left unrepresented at this crucial forum, South Africa’s Department of Environmental Affairs have a lot to answer for.


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mouseinthehouse
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2014

Post by mouseinthehouse »

The non-response from Sanparks on their website forum says it all really. Totally incompetent communication and publicity. They now have thousands of comments and shares of this sad horror spread all over social media. Instead of coming forward with a clear and hard hitting message stating what happened, what they are doing and keeping the public informed on an ongoing basis....you have a couple of vague sentences with no facts whatsoever. No concern expressed, nothing.

PATHETIC.

HOW CAN THEY EXPECT TO KEEP INTELLIGENT AND CONCERNED PEOPLE ON BOARD WITH THIS IF THEY CANNOT OR WILL NOT ENGAGE WITH THE PUBLIC?


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Richprins
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2014

Post by Richprins »

I've forwarded to everyone, mith, but the facebook page gives some info...that SP (Don English) are desperately looking for the rhino? No results yet... -O-

SP will have to come to the fore at some stage. In fact, ironically, this facebook page may help!


Please check Needs Attention pre-booking: https://africawild-forum.com/viewtopic.php?f=322&t=596
mouseinthehouse
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2014

Post by mouseinthehouse »

I have no access to the Sanparks FB page because I left the group because I am too outspoken on it ie I don't stick to posting pretty pictures O** and get flamed so now I cannot read any comments there because it is a closed group.

The total response to this topic on Sanparks website forum minus my own contributions and moderators is about four or five comments. Sanparks forum is a joke.

Sanparks communication is a joke.

Sanparks PR is a joke.

It is about time they employed PR people who can ACTUALLY engage with the public in a mutually beneficial way instead of the dolts they currently have.


ExFmem
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2014

Post by ExFmem »

I so admire women with cojones, and there are a few on here that are deserving of extra admiration...you know who you are, because character and integrity often make for nonacceptance in some circles. BRAVO to each of you! Smilies would diminish the seriousness of this tragedy, so I won't post any.


RobertT
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2014

Post by RobertT »

mouseinthehouse wrote:I have no access to the Sanparks FB page because I left the group because I am too outspoken on it ie I don't stick to posting pretty pictures O** and get flamed so now I cannot read any comments there because it is a closed group.

The total response to this topic on Sanparks website forum minus my own contributions and moderators is about four or five comments. Sanparks forum is a joke.

Sanparks communication is a joke.

Sanparks PR is a joke.

It is about time they employed PR people who can ACTUALLY engage with the public in a mutually beneficial way instead of the dolts they currently have.
It is the weekend Mith, if they couldn't get somebody to attend a conference in London because of the State of the nation address, you won't get a reply on weekend, this whole attitude runs through our parastatals. But we will accept money and the rest of the world will just hand over money, we need the situation ( poaching ) to remain so that the money flows in. If this govt and in extension Parastatals wanted to slow or stop the poaching a bigger commitment from .gov would have been forthcoming. Look at the commitment from Botswana's gov and look at their poaching stats.


PennyinSA
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2014

Post by PennyinSA »

This was posted by a member of Oscap:

'This is a genuine issue and here are the actual facts so far …

Yesterday afternoon, a local guide – Ciska van Niekerk – recorded this event.

On MISA (a closed group – Mpumalanga Independent Safari Association), she posted the following last night:

(a) The picture, as shown here, from one of Frans Lombard’s almost 3000 shares today;

(b) Her text about it:
“We encountered this poor animal on our way out to Phabeni Gate yesterday. I phoned Pretoriuskop area ranger, got a luke warm response. Started phoning around till I got hold of Don. Mike Stevens went back till the helicopter arrived. They couldn't find the rhino, Don phoned about 18:00 to say they started a foot search.”

FTR – for the record – it appears that ‘Don’ is Don English the Section Ranger. '

https://www.facebook.com/groups/OSCAP/

So, it appears that it was reported as soon as possible?

I am astounded that such a game changing event in this 'war against poaching' has garnered a non-response here from Sanparks. I think SP totally under estimate the amount of damage this does internationally. Instead it could be used to gather further support and awareness with the right communication and publicity.

Rather, what we have: 'nothing to see here, move along...'


mouseinthehouse
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2014

Post by mouseinthehouse »

Penny I put that post on Sanparks forum lol. I just copied the quotes to show that the incident was apparently reported in a timely manner.

Haven't heard anything since. Any news on the SP Facebook page?


PennyinSA
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2014

Post by PennyinSA »

No the only person who has posted in any official capacity is Lesego and nothing further. There is a thread opened up on SP web site that has gone to a couple of pages but still no official communication from anybody in the Park. There again when we had the incident a couple of months ago when a tourist posted a picture of an hyaena on a tourist road south of Afsaal with a rhino's leg in its mouth, we got no response from Sanparks as to what had transpired so I am not holding my breath!


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