Rhino Poaching 2013

Information & discussion on the Rhino Poaching Pandemic
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Richprins
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2013

Post by Richprins »

Today's Lowvelder:



02 April 2013

SKUKUZA - A high number of poaching incidents were recorded in the Kruger National Park (KNP) over the Easter weekend.


According to Maj Gen (Ret) Johan Jooste, commanding officer, the past two long weekends have seen high-intensity incursions into the park.


"The heightened activities started on March 21 and by April 1, 56 incursions had been recorded by the KNP rangers’ corp," Jooste said.


"While the whole country was relaxing, the battle to save our rhino was at its peak in the area. Our men in uniform were kept busy by greedy bandits who wanted to plunder our natural heritage. We would like to commend our rangers and allies from the SANDF and SAPS for their assistance these past two long weekends - if it were not for their dedication, we could be counting huge losses,” Jooste said.


According to a press release by SANParks, the incursions that have been recorded include incidents of spoor that were noticed, six incidents of shots being fired, four sightings of groups of poachers - who in some instances escaped back into Mozambique - and four contacts with poachers.


Of the four contacts, one was fatally wounded on March 30 and another is thought to have committed suicide on April 1.


"On March 31 there was an arrest effected by the Rangers Corp and a .385 rifle, ammunition and poaching equipment were recovered. In the same incident a badly mutilated rhino cow was discovered nearby with its horns hacked off. The poor animal was still alive and bleeding profusely. There was no alternative for the rangers but to euthanize it. The search for the arrested poacher’s accomplices is continuing," the press release read.


In Nwanetsi, on April 1, a shot was heard and the patrolling rangers stumbled upon the body of a suspected poacher with a self-inflicted injury. It is thought he killed himself upon realising that he was surrounded. A .485 rifle was found next to his body.


“We are immensely saddened by the crash that claimed the lives of our servicemen who have been good allies and partners in the fight against this scourge. Our prayers and thoughts are with their next of kin and we offer our sincerest condolences,” Jooste concluded.



Scary stuff! O/ O/ O/


http://www.looklocal.co.za/looklocal/co ... ver-Easter


Please check Needs Attention pre-booking: https://africawild-forum.com/viewtopic.php?f=322&t=596
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H. erectus
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2013

Post by H. erectus »

.Gov, this poaching is beginning to cost this country
dearly!!!

Please take meaningful action to curb this tragedy!!!

First your animals were taken from you, now your
citizens are being taken!!!

All while the scenarios are trying to pose their best,
.gov, your asset!!!!

.gov please do not waste!!! Your litter bin being full!!!


Heh,.. H.e
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2013

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SA: Statement by the Department of Environmental Affairs, update on rhino poaching statistics (03/04/2013)

A rhino had to be euthanised in the Kruger National Park after she was badly mutilated by poachers a day after a SA Air Force helicopter crashed in the Park claiming the lives of all five soldiers on board.

The SAAF helicopter was participating in a rhino anti-poaching operation on Saturday night when the accident happened. The cause of the accident is being investigated by the SA National Defence Force.

On Sunday, SANParks rangers heard two shots and reacted with the support of the SANParks helicopter. During a brief contact, one armed suspected poacher was arrested. A .375 rifle and silencer were recovered. A badly mutilated rhino cow was found alive close to the scene of the contact. The animal was bleeding profusely from having its horns, entire mouth, tongue, nose and eyes hacked off and had to be euthanised. The search for the alleged poacher’s accomplice is continuing.

This brings the number of rhino poached in South Africa since the beginning of the year to 203.

The Kruger National Park remains the hardest hit with 146 rhino having been poached since January. A total of 18 rhino have been killed in North West, 17 have been killed in KwaZulu-Natal, 13 in Limpopo and 10 in Mpumalanga.

A total of 60 people have been arrested, 36 of them in the Kruger National Park. The reduction in the number of arrests can be attributed to the fact that the case against nine alleged poachers arrested near Lephalale in March has been withdrawn in the local Magistrate’s Court. This means that cases are being pursued against 11 alleged poachers in the province at present, and not 20 as previously reported. Three alleged couriers were arrested in February.

Fifty-six incursions by alleged rhino poachers were recorded by members of the KNP ranger corps between 21 March and 1 April 2013.

In the shootouts that ensued with poachers, one alleged poachers was fatally wounded on Sunday, while another was believed to have committed suicide on Monday after he was surrounded by members of the ranger corps.

South Africans are urged to report incidents of poaching and tip-offs to the anonymous tip-off lines 0800 205 005, 08600 10111 or Crime-Line on 32211.

Rhino poaching statistics

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Re: Rhino Poaching 2013

Post by Penga Ndlovu »

Yep.

203

On a "good" note.

Sabi Sands is going to dart all their rhino's and poisen the horns in order to curb the scurge called rhino poaching.


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Re: Rhino Poaching 2013

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Penga Ndlovu wrote:
On a "good" note.

Sabi Sands is going to dart all their rhino's and poisen the horns in order to curb the scurge called rhino poaching.


Media release: ExtensiveRhino Horn Toxification To Counter Poaching Upsurge
Andrew Parker, CEO Sabi Sand Wildtuin Association
Johannesburg, April 2013

Toxic infusions are the latest weapon to counter the thriving industry of rhino poaching in the big game areas adjoining South Africa’s Kruger Park. Consumers of the powdered horn in Asia risk becoming seriously ill from ingesting a so-called “medicinal product” which is now contaminated with a non-lethal chemical package. The 49,500 hectare Sabi Sand Wildtuin has launched the country’s first large-scale operation to toxify the horns of its rhinos, together with an indelible pink dye which exposes the illegal contraband on airport scanners worldwide.
Many world famous Big Five game properties on the border of the national park are engaged in a costly struggle against relentless raids on the rhino in the fertile bushveld in the western lowveld of Mpumalanga. The Sabi Sand Wildtuin Association of property owners this year will spend R6.5m on security operations to intercept and head off the incursions – a budget allocation which has tripled since 2008, when the crisis first came to the fore. These defensive strategies, undertaken with the police and SA National Parks (SANParks), are facing predatory gangs heavily armed and highly motivated to meet the insatiable demand in Asian markets for rhino horn. That market is currently paying an estimated $65,000 (R600,000-plus) per kilo for mature horns, which average 4-4.5 kgs in weight when sawn or hacked off close to the skull of the harvested carcase.
The poachers themselves, the starting point of the criminal traffic inside and around the Kruger Park, receive a mere fraction of the R2-2.5m value of each horn from the syndicates that plan the raids and export the material. Yet the size of their pay-offs in the neighbouring low-income communities is ample enough to keep the poachers safe from being identified.
Intelligence is a prime asset in the escalating conflict. For this reason the numbers of rhino located in the area are kept confidential, as are the numbers lost to date. The national statistics are harrowing enough to the future of wildlife conservation and game tourism. The first spike in the incidence of rhino poaching was in 2008, when 88 animals were lost. This year more than double that number have been butchered in only the first three months.
The Sabi Sand Wildtuin Association’s game-changing toxification campaign is as much about sending a message to the illegal trade worldwide as it is about rendering the rhino horns inside its perimeter both worthless and hazardous as traditional medicine.
Andrew Parker, 41, CEO of the SSWA, says that compromising the product is the most effective deterrent to the illegal market.
“Sabi Sand is leading this programme because we are located at the epicentre of the problem at the southern end of the Kruger Park, which suffers up to 70% of the rhino killings. Poaching syndicates are here in large numbers and we are vulnerable as a western buffer between them and the Kruger Park.”
Up to 2,000 people are employed in the Sabi Sand reserve, mostly local residents. Information about planned anti-poaching operations becomes common knowledge very quickly outside the perimeter fences. The intel is worth tip-off money. Poacher gangs can then blend into the community and enjoy unquestioned access in and out of the Sabi Sand area along the shared local roads.
“We are sending a message through the supply chain that rhino horn from Sabi Sand will endanger the health of anyone who uses it as a medicine,” says Parker. “It also raises the stakes against agents smuggling it through airports. When their market dries up we expect the balance of risk against reward will swing back in favour of our own conservation operations.”
Those operations are essentially defensive, counter-measures based on the surveillance of the daily movement of game and its natural predators. Poachers infiltrating the reserve are spotted and tracked as a matter of course and the information is fed into the communications network shared by the Big Five game lodges and the rest of the Association’s 42 members.
The decision to launch the rhino horn infusions was agreed unanimously by the association’s members in February, says Parker, asthe poaching threat became aggressive and adroit enough to match the reserve’s combined ranger-watch. “To date, interventions have focused on bringing additional manpower into the field to counter the problem,” he says. “This has proved effective in terms of arrests but not in stemming the rising body count of rhinos.
“There is a limitless recruiting pool of poachers inside and outside our borders, and they enjoy a tactical advantage against the counter-measures we’ve employed so far. They dictate the time, the place and the scale of their engagements and they hide in plain sight amongst local communities.”
The Sabi Sand properties are making a direct contribution to the national economy of R500m a year, says Andrew Parker, who wrote his Masters in Ecology at Wits and then worked in the SanParks business development unit in Pretoria. He then managed the Welgevonden private reserve in the Waterberg north of Johannesburg for five years before taking up his present Sabi Sand appointment in 2010.
“I’ve been in conservation for my entire career,” he says. “Overcoming this present scourge is a fight in which we must prevail. Our strongest available response against poaching is to cripple the business of illegal rhino horn trading before it sabotages our own existing businesses.”
The rewards for the poachers are rising as the costs for conservation agencies are similarly rising. The balance of their value chain must be reversed at its source.
“Security costs are increasing. At Sabi Sand alone we are spending R6.5m on security this year which is 50% of our annual budget for the care and maintenance of the game and the infrastructure of roads, and communications. Against that expenditure the poachers are not restricted by any rules and how they respond to our policing them. We encounter incursions of poachers across our boundaries from the south, west and north.”
Inserting a toxin into the horns of rhinos is a process which has been used on 100-plus animals in the past 18 months, pioneered by veterinary surgeon Dr Charles van Niekerk at the Rhino and Lion reserve at Kromdraai north-west of Johannesburg. The results have proved to be non-harmful to the rhinos, cost-effective, and an immediate and long-lasting solution for private game reserves which are seen as easy targets for poachers.
The only possible danger to rhinos having their horns infused is the stress caused by being immobilised. For this reason, says Andrew Parker, the Sabi Sand treatments are performed outside the hottest part of the day, and the up to 2 ton animals are brought round as quickly as possible. The toxin-dye injections are administered into the horn’s inert (painless) keratin by compressed air.
The Rhino Rescue Project’s Lorinda Hern explained to the authoritative conservation magazine Scientific American in 2011 that the toxin is a compound of parasiticides which are used to control ticks on farm animals like horses, cattle and sheep. It is also ox-pecker friendly. While the treatment is for the benefit and improved health of the animals, she said, it is toxic to humans. Symptoms of ingesting the drug cocktail – in powdered rhino horn, for example – would include nausea and vomiting.
Says Andrew Parker: “We are not aiming to kill the consumers, no matter what we think of them. We want to kill the illegal trade which is preying on our herds. Once the poachers discover that rhino horn from Sabi Sand has no value they will move on. Once the risk/reward balance changes, making incursions against our own very experienced security counter measures will no longer be worth the risk.”
The SSWA has considerable support for its latest initiative. Devaluing the rhino horns is only one of three phases of its strategy to protect and conserve the Sabi Sand wildlife in the long term. Winning the war means building up and motivating a highly-skilled staff on the ground; developing an excellent intelligence network; and winning the hearts and minds of surrounding communities by involving them more and more in the business of the tourism industry.
To this end the Sabi Sand owners’ association has joined forces with powerful bodies in the public and private sectors. One is SANParks’ Working For Wildlife programme, led by Professor Guy Preston, a government-driven initiative which aims to provide funding to recruit and employ additional manpower. The private-public partnership has been piloted on the Sabi Sand and it continues to fund the recruitment, training and employment of 25 previously unemployed local youth as field rangers.
A second initiative is titled Game Reserve United. It combines the field reportage from all the game reserves west of Kruger Park from Phalaborwa to White River.
Says Parker: “The earlier poachers are located, the better we can beat them to their targets. Equipment like radar and drones would be most effective in this but they are too expensive for our budget. Good old fashioned intel remains our best weapon.
“The reserves are putting money into a pot under the auspices of the Wildlife and Environment Society of South Africa. This will fund reliable intelligence gathering amongst the local communities. Since the stakes are becoming so high in the illegal rhino horn trade informants are now playing both sides in order to cash in. We have to compete against these payoffs in order to identify suspects and the targets of their next raids.”
By running two forms of deterrent against the lucrative trade the Sabi Sand Wildtuin Association aims to seize the advantage against the poaching cartels in its own area and notify everyone supporting their activities from Mpumalanga to Maputo, from Vietnam to China, that we’ve moved their market’s goalposts.
“The media in South Africa and globally maintain a close watch on the shrinking herds of our rhino. The same platform can expose exactly what the poachers are up against from now on. They’ve had an easy ride so far, running a vast and brutal, hugely profitable trade under the noses of government authorities between here and Asia. Now we are forcing them to answer to their consumers about what they are passing off as medicine.”


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Re: Rhino Poaching 2013

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\O \O \O


Sometimes it’s not until you don’t see what you want to see, that you truly open your eyes.
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2013

Post by Penga Ndlovu »

Thanks for posting it Toko as I am not at a pc at the moment. \O 0/0


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Re: Rhino Poaching 2013

Post by iNdlovu »

Excellent news, i wonder when Sanparks will ever get around to doing this


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Re: Rhino Poaching 2013

Post by Sprocky »

iNdlovu wrote:Excellent news, i wonder when Sanparks will ever get around to doing this
I don't think there is enough dedication or commitment. :-(

This exercise must cost a few $'s, SANParks are only interested in reaping (sp: raping), not investing in the future! 0*\


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Re: Rhino Poaching 2013

Post by PennyinSA »

Bravo Mr. Parker - Sabi Sands is certainly showing the way - maybe Timbavati Management should sit up and take note and stop hunting and rather emulate SS in protecting their rhino!

Will Sanparks do this - No not unless private corporations throw their full weight at funding this in KNP but there is certainly not the political will to change anything.

If the DEA and Sanparks really want us to believe that they are determined to stamp out poaching then a whole string of things need to happen with immediate effect - firstly, that fence between us and Mozambique needs to go up yesterday, secondly, the heightened security which we were told was to be implemented at gates has now got to be addressed as currently its business as uaual, thirdly the abuse of gates and roads after hours and right through the night has got to be stopped and last but not least the staff camps have got to be cleaned out as there is definitely an undesirable element that are finding refuge in these camps and Sanparks needs to get rid of those who do not have a right to be there and the old permit system of being allowed to visit someone in a staff camp needs to be re-introduced as a matter of grave urgency. When all of these pre-requisites have been addressed then and only then will they find people ready to contribute towards the treatment of rhino horns in KNP.


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