France24,
AFP, 26 january 2013
An elephant
at the Amboseli game reserve, approximately 250 kilometres south of Kenyan
capital Nairobi on December 30, 2012. Faced with poachers who are ravaging
elephant and rhino populations, African nations could do worse than look to
Namibia for a game plan to combat the scourge.
Elephant
tusk pieces in a secret building in the world's largest wildlife park, the
South African Kruger Park on October 30, 2002. Faced with poachers who are
ravaging elephant and rhino populations, African nations could do worse than
look to Namibia for a game plan to combat the scourge.
A badly
injured white rhino lies in a hollow after poachers sawed off its horn in Cape
Town on August 22, 2011. Faced with poachers who are ravaging elephant and
rhino populations, African nations could do worse than look to Namibia for a
game plan to combat the scourge.
AFP - Faced
with poachers who are ravaging elephant and rhino populations, African nations
could do worse than look to Namibia for a game plan to combat the scourge.
![]() |
Elephant
tusk pieces in a secret building
in the world's largest wildlife park, the
South
African Kruger Park on October 30, 2002.
|
Last year
saw a record 668 rhino killed in South Africa, according to the government,
while in east Africa elephant killings increased apace.
The blame
has been directed toward Asia, where demand for rhino horn, held to have
medicinal value, is on the increase. Elephants are prized for their ivory
tusks.
After
several quiet years, Namibia too has been touched by the bloody uptake.
Late last
year a black rhino cow was killed and dehorned in the south African country's
remote and scenic northwest, her helpless calf left to die.
Though an
isolated event, for Namibians, it was a rare and fearsome echo of the past.
For decades
under South African rule, the country endured profligate poaching that
threatened to exterminate wildlife populations and to discourage tourist
dollars.
Today
things are different.
Within days
of the rhino's death, a culprit was arrested. A trial is now pending.
The
apparent overnight success in tracking down the poacher was in fact due to
decades of work.
It began 30
years ago when Garth Owen-Smith, a pioneer of community-based conservation,
visited rural homesteads to encourage residents to cherish local wildlife.
His
argument was simple: wild animals and farming people with livestock can not
only co-exist but actually benefit each other.
Owen-Smith
recalls his point in a recent book, "An Arid Eden," writing that
"if the wildlife was conserved, it would one day attract tourists,
creating jobs and bringing money to the area."
Local
communities were initially reluctant to cooperate, but eventually the plan
worked.
In 1980,
Namibia had an estimated 300 black rhinos left. Today their numbers total some
1,700 animals.
Desert
elephants were reduced to some 155 animals in the early 1980s and now they
number around 600.
According to Pierre du Preez, current rhino coordinator for the ministry of environment and tourism, the policies worked partly because tracking animals for tourists provided well-paid jobs.
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| A badly injured white rhino lies in a hollow after poachers sawed off its horn in Cape Town on August 22, 2011. |
According to Pierre du Preez, current rhino coordinator for the ministry of environment and tourism, the policies worked partly because tracking animals for tourists provided well-paid jobs.
"Rural
neighbours to rhino populations are far more pro-conservation, making it more
difficult for individuals in these communities to become poachers as this might
harm the whole community," he said.
"Better
cooperation and trust exists between the (ministry), police, non-governmental
organisations and the communities, thus the risk for illegal activities
increases as the community will report to authorities."
The rhino
poached in December was found by local people and immediately reported to
officials.
This
cooperation on the ground is being augmented with high-tech tactics.
"Security
devices were implanted in a significant percentage of all rhino in high-risk
areas, security personnel (are) specially trained and high-tech security
systems are in place," Du Preez said.
An even
more drastic measure may be on the cards. In 1989, Namibia was the first
country in sub-Saharan Africa to dehorn black rhinos to prevent poaching.
"This might become a possibility again," Du Preez added.
Namibia's
success also shows the importance of tackling the politics that underlie and
enable poaching.
In the
1970s and 1980s, Namibia?s vast open spaces were effectively used as private
hunting grounds by officials from the ruling South African government and top
army personnel.
Officers
visiting the war zones on Namibia?s northern borders, where guerrillas of the
South West Africa People's Organisation (SWAPO) were waging an independence
struggle, would be treated to hunting trips with army planes and helicopters.
Temporary
tent camps were set up and cabinet members from Pretoria including defence
minister PW Botha -- later South Africa's president -- could even enjoy
ice-cubes in their rum and coke or whisky.
The result
was that hundreds of elephants, rhinos, giraffe and thousands of antelopes were
shot for the pot, for illegal trade and for trophies.
Former
prime minister John Vorster is thought to have shot an elephant by the Ombonde
River in 1973.
When Namibia
won its independence from South Africa in 1990, the government laid the
groundwork for a new approach on poaching -- "community-based natural
resource management," a clumsy name for an effective policy.
Today,
politicians may be able to set the stage for similarly successful polices by
addressing demand for rhino horn at the source in Asia when signatories of the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora
(CITES) -- a treaty to protect wildlife -- meet in Thailand in March.
Related Articles:
Ivory sales must stop or Africa's elephants could soon be extinct, says Jane Goodall
Malaysia seizes 1,500 elephant tusks headed for China
Illegal wildlife trade 'threatening national security', says WWF
In pictures: Wildlife crime
![]() |
| Malaysian customs officers display elephant tusks that were recently seized in Port Klang, outside Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photograph: AP |
Related Articles:
Ivory sales must stop or Africa's elephants could soon be extinct, says Jane Goodall
Malaysia seizes 1,500 elephant tusks headed for China
Illegal wildlife trade 'threatening national security', says WWF
In pictures: Wildlife crime




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