Google – AFP, 10 December 2012
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An adult
white rhino looks on at the Entabeni Safari Conservancy, north east
of
Johannesburg (AFP/File, Stephane de Sakutin)
|
HANOI —
Vietnam and South Africa signed a deal Monday to tackle rhino poaching and the
lucrative illicit trade in the creature's horns for use in traditional
medicine, government officials and activists said.
Illegal
hunting of South Africa's rhinos has risen in recent years to meet surging
demand for their horns in East Asia, in particular Vietnam where they are
highly prized for their supposed medicinal qualities.
Fighting
wildlife crime "especially on the rare, precious and endangered species
including rhinos (is) always of concern to the Vietnam government",
Minister of Agriculture Cao Duc Phat said in a statement.
The
minister vowed to seek a total ban on the import of all rhino products,
according to the statement released after the signing ceremony in Hanoi.
Global
wildlife activists have been pushing Vietnam to tackle the illegal rhino horn
trade, which is popular among the Southeast Asian nation's elite who can afford
the estimated $5,000 it costs for each 100-gram chunk sold.
The deal,
which is partly a result of heavy lobbying by activists, covers cooperation in
biodiversity management and conservation and refers only in general terms to
addressing illegal wildlife smuggling.
But
conservation groups welcomed the move.
The deal
marks "a turning point in efforts to protect Africa's rhinos," said
Stuart Chapman, of the WWF in the Greater Mekong.
"South
Africa and Vietnam have publicly signalled their intention to get tough on the
criminal syndicates behind the rhino poaching spree," Chapman said in a statement
after the deal was signed.
More than
600 rhinos have been poached across South Africa since the start of the year,
according to official South African sources.
Many of
their horns are suspected to have been smuggled to Vietnam.
South
Africa is home to about three-quarters of Africa's 20,000 or so white rhinos
and 4,800 critically endangered black rhinos.

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