Rhino Poaching 2015
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2015
Official number released today at Press conference :Rhino Poaching Stats released today - 749 rhinos poached in South Africa and 544 in KNP.
- Richprins
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2015
May 10, 290 for Kruger...August 30, 544 for Kruger....almost doubled in 3.5 months?
Please check Needs Attention pre-booking: https://africawild-forum.com/viewtopic.php?f=322&t=596
Re: Rhino Poaching 2015
Yipnan wrote:
disaster
They aren't winning which I'm sure is half the reason for hiding the stats as much as possible
Re: Rhino Poaching 2015
Minister Edna Molewa highlights progress in the fight against rhino poaching
30 August 2015
Good Afternoon Ladies and Gentlemen of the Media,
We are together with colleagues from the Security Cluster presenting this Report to you as a team.
Ladies and Gentlemen you all know them. It’s Ministers of Defence and Military Veterans - Ms Nosiviwe Maphisa-Nqakula, Police – Mr Nathi Nhleko and State Security – Mr David Mahlobo.
We are here today to talk to you as a collective as you all know we are dealing with a matter that is of concern to the nation.
The nature of this challenge requires our collective efforts as government working with the private sector, communities, civil society and the business sector to ensure the Integrated Strategic Management approach is successful, not only in South Africa, but also within Africa and in the rest of the world.
I want to thank our friends from the media who have made the time to be here today, especially on a Sunday. We regard the media as our partners - who make it possible for all our stakeholders and the public at large to be kept informed about our efforts as government. It is the people of South Africa who have entrusted us with the protection of our rhino: it is a responsibility we do not take lightly; and we know that we can only be successful if we can mobilize all South Africans to support us.
As you will know, this report back is the third of this year; we had our first on 20 January, and the second on the 10th of May. Providing regular and timely updates on our progress in the battle against poaching is part of this government’s commitment to transparency and accountability.
We committed to work in four areas of interventions to manage our rhinos all under international and national co-operation - compulsory interventions, interventions to increase rhino numbers, long-term sustainability interventions and game-changing interventions
1. Compulsory Interventions
1. 1. Anti-poaching compulsory interventions
Our anti-poaching efforts are being undertaken in the face of a 27% increase in poachers entering the KNP to attempt to kill rhino.
So far during 2015, there have been 1 617 positively identified poacher activities in the KNP.
This implies that 3 incursions occur per day, anywhere along the thousand kilometre long KNP border.
This means that there are 12 active poacher groups at any given time somewhere on the 2 million hectares of the KNP.
That is why our teams have made physical contact with heavily-armed poachers 95 times so far this year, close to three times a week.
As you will see from the slide that is up, it is our people who are making that critical difference between the poachers and our rhino; were it not for them, the numbers would be far far higher.
To illustrate the escalation of the threat, let me remind you that for the whole of 2014, there were 111 contacts with heavily-armed poachers.
In response to this escalated threat, we have stepped up our efforts, which includes traditional anti-poaching policing strategies. In this regard, the utilisation of K-9 units, night capability as well as air and land capability, is now bearing fruit.
The total number of arrests inside Kruger National Park was 138 for this year compared to 81 arrests for the same period last year as at 27th August 2015. A good example of the outcome of our increased effort was during the month of July when 35 arrests were made in Kruger National Park alone.
We are particularly proud of the work done by our law enforcement agencies. For instance this cooperation led to the arrest of eight poachers in an extended operation over 24 hours in the south of the KNP as part of Operation Southern Comfort. Two heavy-calibre rifles, ammunition and poaching equipment were seized during this operation.
I’d like to announce that just a short while ago, as we were preparing for this briefing, our Kingfisher Rangers, with backup from the K-9 unit, made contact with a group of suspected poachers on the western side of the KNP close to the Orpen Gate, after following them for over 13 kilometers.
One suspect has been arrested and a rifle, ammunition and poaching equipment confiscated. The other suspects are being pursued with both canine and aerial support. So as you see, our teams on the ground are making a real difference in real time.
1. 2. Intensive Protection Zone
As we reported earlier this year, the zoning approach embarked on in the KNP is bearing fruit.
The Intensive Protection Zone concept is progressing well and we have now reached the stage where night airborne reaction with well-equipped anti-poaching rapid response forces is being implemented – a unique world class capability for a park.
In this regard, the KNP has received a donation of top-of-the-range monocular night vision equipment valued at R3.4 million from the Peace Parks Foundation to support the ranger corps.
The receipt of this equipment has contributed to a levelling of the playing field - as poachers become more and more sophisticated.
Night vision has become the key opto-electronic technology in modern conflicts that take place in the dark – the time when most poachers sneak up on their prey.
The new equipment allows for thermal imaging and high quality depth perception. Part of this donation has included training of rangers to ensure they are able to use this force-multiplying piece of equipment properly.
2.3. Pro-active anti-poaching measures and the use of technology
The Mission Area Joint Operations Centre in the Kruger National Park is fully functional. The coordination between all the stakeholders housed in the MAJOC has seen good results with Operation Rhino set to run until 2018.
We have recorded a number of successes due to improved information sharing, part of our game-changing interventions that include disrupting criminal syndicates.
We are pleased to announce that joint situational awareness through electronic means and live-streaming of information now informs in-time decision making, faster reaction and more often proactive operations.
This enables us to employ resources more intelligently and to be one step ahead of the poachers and their bosses.
Be that as it may, by Thursday the 27 August 2015, the number of rhino we lost to poachers was 749 for the whole country. Of these, 544 were poached in the KNP. By last year this time the number of rhino lost to poachers were 716 for the whole of the country and 459 for the KNP.
This means that outside of the KNP, poaching has decreased across the rest of the country: evidence that our law enforcement authorities led by the SAPS are playing a key role in stabilizing poaching in the rest of South Africa.
As I have constantly emphasized, were it not for the measures we have undertaken as part of the Integrated Strategic Management of Rhinoceros the situation would be worse, given the escalation of poacher activity.
As mentioned earlier, it is encouraging that we have since seen an increase in the number of arrests recorded this year. The July arrests inside the KNP for instance were the highest on record for a single month.
2.4. Ports of entry and exit
As you may be aware, the DEA Green Scorpions, Customs and Border Police are working in collaboration at the OR Tambo International Airport.
Our teams are there to make sure that non-compliance with the National Environmental Management: Biodiversity Act (NEMBA) and its Regulations are enforced in general, and detecting the trafficking of wildlife products in particular.
They have also been training SAA Cargo Handlers on the detection of illegal consignments, with further training to be rolled out to other port officials and operators as part of the ongoing programme with the National Border Management Co-ordinating Centre (NBMCC).
We are happy to report that we are in the process of deploying Green Scorpions to KwaZulu-Natal on permanent basis. The Green Scorpions will be stationed at King Shaka International Airport (KSIA) servicing Durban harbour, KSIA and Golela border post.
With the new Border Management Agency (BMA) now operational, Operation Pyramid has been launched in the KNP as a pilot; a further measure intended to coordinate the efforts of different government departments in curbing cross-border crime. This additional measure demonstrates further commitment to safeguard South Africa’s borders.
Managing Rhino Populations
During our May report-back we had just gazetted the Biodiversity Management Plan for White Rhinoceros for public consultation.
The Plan is aimed at ensuring the long-term survival in nature of the species through the implementation of conservation management measures. Parts of the plan are already under implementation.
As I announced in my May briefing, a number of animals would be sold to the private sector as part of our interventions to increase rhino numbers;
SANParks has commenced with the translocation and delivery of white rhino from the Kruger National Park to private land owners. SANParks will deliver 150 during 2015.
As part of evaluating the effects of sales and poaching, SANParks will conduct another Rhino survey during September 2015. During September 2014, a Rhino survey using peer-reviewed scientific methods recorded 8 001 to 9 290 white rhino in the Kruger National Park.
Elsewhere in South Africa, the African Rhino Specialist Group of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) reports that provincial reserves have 4 400 white rhino while private owners have 5 300. The total South African white rhino population remains relatively stable since 2012 in the face of escalating poacher activity.
As you all know, as poachers go for the bigger animals, young ones are left orphaned; and we continue to take care of these rhino.
Since 2012 a total of 26 orphaned rhinos have been rescued from the KNP; eight of these were during 2015. These orphans will ultimately be released as part of family groups in semi-intensive and free-ranging areas.
3. Long-Term Sustainability Measures – Communities
We have long emphasized that people are the cornerstone of conservation: without involving communities we cannot hope to eradicate this problem.
We aim to strengthen community involvement and participation in conservation through the much-anticipated implementation of the Biodiversity Economy Strategy which will be launched by President Jacob Zuma at the upcoming Biodiversity Economy Indaba.
At the core of this strategy is a wildlife sector transformation agenda to ensure provision of sustainable alternative livelihood strategies for our communities, which will assist in curbing poaching as well. This Strategy seeks to promote inclusive economic opportunities, reflected by a sector which will be equitable and dictate fair processes and procedures in the distribution of natural resources and access to markets, and undertaking of projects that will assist to uplift the financial and economic status of our people.
Species conservation, including the rhino, will form part of this strategic intervention. As part of our strategy on faciliate community ownership of rhino, a successful case has been the handover of five rhino to the Mdluli Tribal Authority in Mpumalanga in March 2014.
We are also working with two other communities in Limpopo Province, the Balepye and Selwane communities, who have been beneficiaries of South Africa’s land redistribution programme. Both communities have undertaken a project to utilize this land for conservation.
Also as part of our community interventions our department’s Environmental Monitors have been introduced into areas facing high numbers of poaching incidents has played a demonstrable role in combating this crime through their work of educating communities in the area on the benefits of conservation and rhino protection. There are a total of 1 460 Environmental Monitors (EM’s) deployed across the country – through our Environmental Protection and Infrastructure Programmes.
4. Game-changing interventions
Ladies and Gentlemen, our efforts to address poaching involve various partners and parties.
In May we reported that the GEF-UNEP Rhino Project is under implementation. In this regard, as part of inter departmental collaboration between DEA and the South African Judicial Education Institute (within the Department of Justice) we hosted a Judicial Colloquium on Biodiversity Crime last week.
One hundred and fifty magistrates from district and regional courts across the country attended the event which was aimed at raising awareness on environmental crime, with a particular focus on rhino.
The next advanced biodiversity crime scene management training is scheduled to take place from 7 September this year. This will also provide an opportunity to finalise the filming material which will serve as visual supplementary training material for rhino crime scene investigators. The Prosecutor Training Conference is then scheduled to take place in November 2015.
The use of game-changing technology has been further bolstered by the use of the four 4x4 Forensic Mobile Units that were handed over to to SANParks, the North West department of economic development, environment, conservation and tourism, as well as the Limpopo department of environment and tourism and the Mpumalanga Tourism and Parks Agency in May. The use of the forensic trailers is in terms of our partnership with the Global Environmental Facility (GEF).
The trailers have been assisting with the effective management of crime scenes, particularly in outlying areas where the correct equipment required for on-scene forensic investigations is not readily available.
Also on the matter of game-changing interventions we are developing Phalaborwa as a hub for operations in the north inclusive of the Limpopo National Park, and are collaborating with South African Airlink at the Phalaborwa airport. This will hopefully cut our response time to poaching incidents in the northern parts of the Park.
3.1 Memoranda of Understanding
We have long reiterated that we cannot win this battle alone. We rely on collaboration and cooperation with international bodies as well as range states to support us in neutralising the threat of organised transnational criminal syndicates involved in the illegal wildlife trade.
Cambodia:
In addition to other MOU’s signed by DEA thus far, on 29 May 2015 we signed a Memorandum of Understanding in the fields of Biodiversity Conservation and Protection with Cambodia.
This is the first agreement to be entered into between South Africa and Cambodia. The Implementation Plan putting into action the terms of the formal environmental agreement between the two countries was also signed.
The main focus of the MOU is to promote cooperation between the parties in the field of biodiversity conservation and protection, compliance with the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), and other relevant legislation.
The envisaged forms of cooperation include the exchange of relevant information and documentation on biodiversity conservation and protection; promoting technical exchange visits of experts, policy makers, regulatorsandlaw enforcers; organising seminars, workshops and meetings;and undertaking collaborative projects.
Vietnam:
Through our awareness and demand management programmes we have seen more youth travel to our beautiful country to be exposed to issues related to rhino conservation.
In June and July, 22 Vietnamese school-going youth who, as winners of the Wild Rhino Competition run at schools in Ho Chi Minh City, embarked on a 5-day educational wilderness trail facilitated by the Wilderness Leadership School in the Hluhluwe-iMfolozi Game Reserve, KwaZulu-Natal. They also participated in educational workshops where they were assisted in developing strategies on how to share their message of conservation with their community.
Mozambique:
There has been further engagement between my Mozambican counterpart, Minister Celso Correira, and I since May 2015.
The Implementation Plan has been signed and is now under implementation.
A significant element of this Plan was the joint launch of the specialized Fauna Bravia Anti-Poaching Unit at Massangir in southwestern Mozambique in Mach 2015.
In support of the Fauna Bravia Anti-Poaching Unit, working with the Peace Parks Foundation (PPF) under the Rhino Protection Programme, we will soon be delivering anti-poaching equipment to my Mozambican counterpart, Minister Correira. In the same event PPF will deliver a small plane called the Savannah light-sport aircraft.
In support of Mozambique developing socio-economic opportunities associated with the wildlife economy we completed the second phase of wildlife other than rhino introductions. That entails supplementing certain plains game species in the Limpopo National Park.
With regards to resettlement of villages we will report progress at the next briefing.
South Africa and Mozambique also submitted a joint CITES Report -- as per the 2013 decision 16.85 on Rhinoceros on collaborative work done in the fight against Rhino Poaching -- on the 31st of July 2015.
Ladies and Gentlemen, in the fight against wildlife crime, there are decisions that are taken at different Conventions whereby State Parties exercise their rights in pursuing those decisions. It is acknowledged that sovereign countries with whom we closely cooperate in this campaign also make independent decisions in the context of their nationally determined priorities and needs.
This is why South Africa respects the decision of Mozambique to dispose of its rhino horns and elephant ivory stockpiles.
After the large seizure of rhino horn in Mozambique, DNA samples were collected by the Rhino Task Team from all available horns, and brought back to South Africa for analysis. From the samples collected we have a basis for prosecution.
People’s Republic of China:
Following the signing of a Wildlife Conservation Implementation Plan with the People’s Republic of China on 23 March, delegates from both countries have been working to ensure that cooperation between the Parties in the fields of law enforcement, compliance with CITES, technology transfer and other relevant legislation and Conventions.
In this the Year of China in South Africa, we will during September be hosting a delegation of youth from China to increase their awareness of wildlife management and crime in South Africa, as well as to raise awareness of the plight of the rhino and other wildlife species.
CITES COP17
The 17th meeting of the Conference of the Parties (CoP 17) will take place at the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesburg, South Africa from 24 September to 5 October 2016.
The Department would like to invite interested parties to register for participation in the preparations for CITES CoP17 and to submit draft proposals for consideration by the National Scientific and Management Authority on or before 15 September 2015. Draft proposals must be based on Resolution Conf. 9.24 of CITES which is the criteria for the Amendment of Appendices I and II which governs the status of a species and the impact of trade on a species and information relating to this can be accessed through the department’s website. The Department will convene a consultation meeting as soon as all stakeholders are registered and proposals are received.
As most of you would be aware, we have set up a Committee of Inquiry to investigate the feasibility, or not of possible trade in rhino horn. The Committee is currently conducting its work. We will report in due course.
Conclusion
Here the full text: http://www.politicsweb.co.za/politics/p ... --edna-mol
Ladies and Gentlemen of the media,
The poaching figures are not cause for despondency. Were it not for the interventions I have outlined, they could unfortunately be far worse.
Of course we have to do far more if we are to stop the slaughter of these animals: and this requires collaboration, teamwork and strengthening strategic partnerships. That is why we are here with you today as a team.
I am convinced that as our successes have shown, collaboration can and does yield fruit.
What gives me perhaps the greatest cause for hope is that communities are now more than ever playing a vital role in preserving our natural heritage.
I want in conclusion to call on you as members of the media to aid us in this fight, for you too are our allies and partners.
Given the magnificent work being done by our people: be they our Environmental Ambassadors, our Green Scorpions, or Rangers or our SANParks scientists..let us also give credit where credit is due.
Together with our colleagues in the law-enforcement sector and prosecution service: we are doing our utmost to disrupt the organized multinational criminal syndicates wherever we find them.
With the help of all South Africans we as a collective reaffirm our commitment to the cause that is common to us all: saving our rhino.
To access the presentation by Dr Sam Ferreira, Large Mammal Ecologist: SANParks, click on:
>> Rhino poaching interventions.
Statement issued by Edna Molewa, Minister of Environmental Affairs, August 30 2015
30 August 2015
Good Afternoon Ladies and Gentlemen of the Media,
We are together with colleagues from the Security Cluster presenting this Report to you as a team.
Ladies and Gentlemen you all know them. It’s Ministers of Defence and Military Veterans - Ms Nosiviwe Maphisa-Nqakula, Police – Mr Nathi Nhleko and State Security – Mr David Mahlobo.
We are here today to talk to you as a collective as you all know we are dealing with a matter that is of concern to the nation.
The nature of this challenge requires our collective efforts as government working with the private sector, communities, civil society and the business sector to ensure the Integrated Strategic Management approach is successful, not only in South Africa, but also within Africa and in the rest of the world.
I want to thank our friends from the media who have made the time to be here today, especially on a Sunday. We regard the media as our partners - who make it possible for all our stakeholders and the public at large to be kept informed about our efforts as government. It is the people of South Africa who have entrusted us with the protection of our rhino: it is a responsibility we do not take lightly; and we know that we can only be successful if we can mobilize all South Africans to support us.
As you will know, this report back is the third of this year; we had our first on 20 January, and the second on the 10th of May. Providing regular and timely updates on our progress in the battle against poaching is part of this government’s commitment to transparency and accountability.
We committed to work in four areas of interventions to manage our rhinos all under international and national co-operation - compulsory interventions, interventions to increase rhino numbers, long-term sustainability interventions and game-changing interventions
1. Compulsory Interventions
1. 1. Anti-poaching compulsory interventions
Our anti-poaching efforts are being undertaken in the face of a 27% increase in poachers entering the KNP to attempt to kill rhino.
So far during 2015, there have been 1 617 positively identified poacher activities in the KNP.
This implies that 3 incursions occur per day, anywhere along the thousand kilometre long KNP border.
This means that there are 12 active poacher groups at any given time somewhere on the 2 million hectares of the KNP.
That is why our teams have made physical contact with heavily-armed poachers 95 times so far this year, close to three times a week.
As you will see from the slide that is up, it is our people who are making that critical difference between the poachers and our rhino; were it not for them, the numbers would be far far higher.
To illustrate the escalation of the threat, let me remind you that for the whole of 2014, there were 111 contacts with heavily-armed poachers.
In response to this escalated threat, we have stepped up our efforts, which includes traditional anti-poaching policing strategies. In this regard, the utilisation of K-9 units, night capability as well as air and land capability, is now bearing fruit.
The total number of arrests inside Kruger National Park was 138 for this year compared to 81 arrests for the same period last year as at 27th August 2015. A good example of the outcome of our increased effort was during the month of July when 35 arrests were made in Kruger National Park alone.
We are particularly proud of the work done by our law enforcement agencies. For instance this cooperation led to the arrest of eight poachers in an extended operation over 24 hours in the south of the KNP as part of Operation Southern Comfort. Two heavy-calibre rifles, ammunition and poaching equipment were seized during this operation.
I’d like to announce that just a short while ago, as we were preparing for this briefing, our Kingfisher Rangers, with backup from the K-9 unit, made contact with a group of suspected poachers on the western side of the KNP close to the Orpen Gate, after following them for over 13 kilometers.
One suspect has been arrested and a rifle, ammunition and poaching equipment confiscated. The other suspects are being pursued with both canine and aerial support. So as you see, our teams on the ground are making a real difference in real time.
1. 2. Intensive Protection Zone
As we reported earlier this year, the zoning approach embarked on in the KNP is bearing fruit.
The Intensive Protection Zone concept is progressing well and we have now reached the stage where night airborne reaction with well-equipped anti-poaching rapid response forces is being implemented – a unique world class capability for a park.
In this regard, the KNP has received a donation of top-of-the-range monocular night vision equipment valued at R3.4 million from the Peace Parks Foundation to support the ranger corps.
The receipt of this equipment has contributed to a levelling of the playing field - as poachers become more and more sophisticated.
Night vision has become the key opto-electronic technology in modern conflicts that take place in the dark – the time when most poachers sneak up on their prey.
The new equipment allows for thermal imaging and high quality depth perception. Part of this donation has included training of rangers to ensure they are able to use this force-multiplying piece of equipment properly.
2.3. Pro-active anti-poaching measures and the use of technology
The Mission Area Joint Operations Centre in the Kruger National Park is fully functional. The coordination between all the stakeholders housed in the MAJOC has seen good results with Operation Rhino set to run until 2018.
We have recorded a number of successes due to improved information sharing, part of our game-changing interventions that include disrupting criminal syndicates.
We are pleased to announce that joint situational awareness through electronic means and live-streaming of information now informs in-time decision making, faster reaction and more often proactive operations.
This enables us to employ resources more intelligently and to be one step ahead of the poachers and their bosses.
Be that as it may, by Thursday the 27 August 2015, the number of rhino we lost to poachers was 749 for the whole country. Of these, 544 were poached in the KNP. By last year this time the number of rhino lost to poachers were 716 for the whole of the country and 459 for the KNP.
This means that outside of the KNP, poaching has decreased across the rest of the country: evidence that our law enforcement authorities led by the SAPS are playing a key role in stabilizing poaching in the rest of South Africa.
As I have constantly emphasized, were it not for the measures we have undertaken as part of the Integrated Strategic Management of Rhinoceros the situation would be worse, given the escalation of poacher activity.
As mentioned earlier, it is encouraging that we have since seen an increase in the number of arrests recorded this year. The July arrests inside the KNP for instance were the highest on record for a single month.
2.4. Ports of entry and exit
As you may be aware, the DEA Green Scorpions, Customs and Border Police are working in collaboration at the OR Tambo International Airport.
Our teams are there to make sure that non-compliance with the National Environmental Management: Biodiversity Act (NEMBA) and its Regulations are enforced in general, and detecting the trafficking of wildlife products in particular.
They have also been training SAA Cargo Handlers on the detection of illegal consignments, with further training to be rolled out to other port officials and operators as part of the ongoing programme with the National Border Management Co-ordinating Centre (NBMCC).
We are happy to report that we are in the process of deploying Green Scorpions to KwaZulu-Natal on permanent basis. The Green Scorpions will be stationed at King Shaka International Airport (KSIA) servicing Durban harbour, KSIA and Golela border post.
With the new Border Management Agency (BMA) now operational, Operation Pyramid has been launched in the KNP as a pilot; a further measure intended to coordinate the efforts of different government departments in curbing cross-border crime. This additional measure demonstrates further commitment to safeguard South Africa’s borders.
Managing Rhino Populations
During our May report-back we had just gazetted the Biodiversity Management Plan for White Rhinoceros for public consultation.
The Plan is aimed at ensuring the long-term survival in nature of the species through the implementation of conservation management measures. Parts of the plan are already under implementation.
As I announced in my May briefing, a number of animals would be sold to the private sector as part of our interventions to increase rhino numbers;
SANParks has commenced with the translocation and delivery of white rhino from the Kruger National Park to private land owners. SANParks will deliver 150 during 2015.
As part of evaluating the effects of sales and poaching, SANParks will conduct another Rhino survey during September 2015. During September 2014, a Rhino survey using peer-reviewed scientific methods recorded 8 001 to 9 290 white rhino in the Kruger National Park.
Elsewhere in South Africa, the African Rhino Specialist Group of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) reports that provincial reserves have 4 400 white rhino while private owners have 5 300. The total South African white rhino population remains relatively stable since 2012 in the face of escalating poacher activity.
As you all know, as poachers go for the bigger animals, young ones are left orphaned; and we continue to take care of these rhino.
Since 2012 a total of 26 orphaned rhinos have been rescued from the KNP; eight of these were during 2015. These orphans will ultimately be released as part of family groups in semi-intensive and free-ranging areas.
3. Long-Term Sustainability Measures – Communities
We have long emphasized that people are the cornerstone of conservation: without involving communities we cannot hope to eradicate this problem.
We aim to strengthen community involvement and participation in conservation through the much-anticipated implementation of the Biodiversity Economy Strategy which will be launched by President Jacob Zuma at the upcoming Biodiversity Economy Indaba.
At the core of this strategy is a wildlife sector transformation agenda to ensure provision of sustainable alternative livelihood strategies for our communities, which will assist in curbing poaching as well. This Strategy seeks to promote inclusive economic opportunities, reflected by a sector which will be equitable and dictate fair processes and procedures in the distribution of natural resources and access to markets, and undertaking of projects that will assist to uplift the financial and economic status of our people.
Species conservation, including the rhino, will form part of this strategic intervention. As part of our strategy on faciliate community ownership of rhino, a successful case has been the handover of five rhino to the Mdluli Tribal Authority in Mpumalanga in March 2014.
We are also working with two other communities in Limpopo Province, the Balepye and Selwane communities, who have been beneficiaries of South Africa’s land redistribution programme. Both communities have undertaken a project to utilize this land for conservation.
Also as part of our community interventions our department’s Environmental Monitors have been introduced into areas facing high numbers of poaching incidents has played a demonstrable role in combating this crime through their work of educating communities in the area on the benefits of conservation and rhino protection. There are a total of 1 460 Environmental Monitors (EM’s) deployed across the country – through our Environmental Protection and Infrastructure Programmes.
4. Game-changing interventions
Ladies and Gentlemen, our efforts to address poaching involve various partners and parties.
In May we reported that the GEF-UNEP Rhino Project is under implementation. In this regard, as part of inter departmental collaboration between DEA and the South African Judicial Education Institute (within the Department of Justice) we hosted a Judicial Colloquium on Biodiversity Crime last week.
One hundred and fifty magistrates from district and regional courts across the country attended the event which was aimed at raising awareness on environmental crime, with a particular focus on rhino.
The next advanced biodiversity crime scene management training is scheduled to take place from 7 September this year. This will also provide an opportunity to finalise the filming material which will serve as visual supplementary training material for rhino crime scene investigators. The Prosecutor Training Conference is then scheduled to take place in November 2015.
The use of game-changing technology has been further bolstered by the use of the four 4x4 Forensic Mobile Units that were handed over to to SANParks, the North West department of economic development, environment, conservation and tourism, as well as the Limpopo department of environment and tourism and the Mpumalanga Tourism and Parks Agency in May. The use of the forensic trailers is in terms of our partnership with the Global Environmental Facility (GEF).
The trailers have been assisting with the effective management of crime scenes, particularly in outlying areas where the correct equipment required for on-scene forensic investigations is not readily available.
Also on the matter of game-changing interventions we are developing Phalaborwa as a hub for operations in the north inclusive of the Limpopo National Park, and are collaborating with South African Airlink at the Phalaborwa airport. This will hopefully cut our response time to poaching incidents in the northern parts of the Park.
3.1 Memoranda of Understanding
We have long reiterated that we cannot win this battle alone. We rely on collaboration and cooperation with international bodies as well as range states to support us in neutralising the threat of organised transnational criminal syndicates involved in the illegal wildlife trade.
Cambodia:
In addition to other MOU’s signed by DEA thus far, on 29 May 2015 we signed a Memorandum of Understanding in the fields of Biodiversity Conservation and Protection with Cambodia.
This is the first agreement to be entered into between South Africa and Cambodia. The Implementation Plan putting into action the terms of the formal environmental agreement between the two countries was also signed.
The main focus of the MOU is to promote cooperation between the parties in the field of biodiversity conservation and protection, compliance with the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), and other relevant legislation.
The envisaged forms of cooperation include the exchange of relevant information and documentation on biodiversity conservation and protection; promoting technical exchange visits of experts, policy makers, regulatorsandlaw enforcers; organising seminars, workshops and meetings;and undertaking collaborative projects.
Vietnam:
Through our awareness and demand management programmes we have seen more youth travel to our beautiful country to be exposed to issues related to rhino conservation.
In June and July, 22 Vietnamese school-going youth who, as winners of the Wild Rhino Competition run at schools in Ho Chi Minh City, embarked on a 5-day educational wilderness trail facilitated by the Wilderness Leadership School in the Hluhluwe-iMfolozi Game Reserve, KwaZulu-Natal. They also participated in educational workshops where they were assisted in developing strategies on how to share their message of conservation with their community.
Mozambique:
There has been further engagement between my Mozambican counterpart, Minister Celso Correira, and I since May 2015.
The Implementation Plan has been signed and is now under implementation.
A significant element of this Plan was the joint launch of the specialized Fauna Bravia Anti-Poaching Unit at Massangir in southwestern Mozambique in Mach 2015.
In support of the Fauna Bravia Anti-Poaching Unit, working with the Peace Parks Foundation (PPF) under the Rhino Protection Programme, we will soon be delivering anti-poaching equipment to my Mozambican counterpart, Minister Correira. In the same event PPF will deliver a small plane called the Savannah light-sport aircraft.
In support of Mozambique developing socio-economic opportunities associated with the wildlife economy we completed the second phase of wildlife other than rhino introductions. That entails supplementing certain plains game species in the Limpopo National Park.
With regards to resettlement of villages we will report progress at the next briefing.
South Africa and Mozambique also submitted a joint CITES Report -- as per the 2013 decision 16.85 on Rhinoceros on collaborative work done in the fight against Rhino Poaching -- on the 31st of July 2015.
Ladies and Gentlemen, in the fight against wildlife crime, there are decisions that are taken at different Conventions whereby State Parties exercise their rights in pursuing those decisions. It is acknowledged that sovereign countries with whom we closely cooperate in this campaign also make independent decisions in the context of their nationally determined priorities and needs.
This is why South Africa respects the decision of Mozambique to dispose of its rhino horns and elephant ivory stockpiles.
After the large seizure of rhino horn in Mozambique, DNA samples were collected by the Rhino Task Team from all available horns, and brought back to South Africa for analysis. From the samples collected we have a basis for prosecution.
People’s Republic of China:
Following the signing of a Wildlife Conservation Implementation Plan with the People’s Republic of China on 23 March, delegates from both countries have been working to ensure that cooperation between the Parties in the fields of law enforcement, compliance with CITES, technology transfer and other relevant legislation and Conventions.
In this the Year of China in South Africa, we will during September be hosting a delegation of youth from China to increase their awareness of wildlife management and crime in South Africa, as well as to raise awareness of the plight of the rhino and other wildlife species.
CITES COP17
The 17th meeting of the Conference of the Parties (CoP 17) will take place at the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesburg, South Africa from 24 September to 5 October 2016.
The Department would like to invite interested parties to register for participation in the preparations for CITES CoP17 and to submit draft proposals for consideration by the National Scientific and Management Authority on or before 15 September 2015. Draft proposals must be based on Resolution Conf. 9.24 of CITES which is the criteria for the Amendment of Appendices I and II which governs the status of a species and the impact of trade on a species and information relating to this can be accessed through the department’s website. The Department will convene a consultation meeting as soon as all stakeholders are registered and proposals are received.
As most of you would be aware, we have set up a Committee of Inquiry to investigate the feasibility, or not of possible trade in rhino horn. The Committee is currently conducting its work. We will report in due course.
Conclusion
Here the full text: http://www.politicsweb.co.za/politics/p ... --edna-mol
Ladies and Gentlemen of the media,
The poaching figures are not cause for despondency. Were it not for the interventions I have outlined, they could unfortunately be far worse.
Of course we have to do far more if we are to stop the slaughter of these animals: and this requires collaboration, teamwork and strengthening strategic partnerships. That is why we are here with you today as a team.
I am convinced that as our successes have shown, collaboration can and does yield fruit.
What gives me perhaps the greatest cause for hope is that communities are now more than ever playing a vital role in preserving our natural heritage.
I want in conclusion to call on you as members of the media to aid us in this fight, for you too are our allies and partners.
Given the magnificent work being done by our people: be they our Environmental Ambassadors, our Green Scorpions, or Rangers or our SANParks scientists..let us also give credit where credit is due.
Together with our colleagues in the law-enforcement sector and prosecution service: we are doing our utmost to disrupt the organized multinational criminal syndicates wherever we find them.
With the help of all South Africans we as a collective reaffirm our commitment to the cause that is common to us all: saving our rhino.
To access the presentation by Dr Sam Ferreira, Large Mammal Ecologist: SANParks, click on:
>> Rhino poaching interventions.
Statement issued by Edna Molewa, Minister of Environmental Affairs, August 30 2015
- Richprins
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2015
CSI-like autopsy seeks to unravel clues
by Thomas Hartleb
Flies climbed over the maggots that writhed in the deep gashes on her face, in her nostrils and in her mouth – which was half opened, like someone exhaling in their sleep.
She had been lying out in the open for five days, with a small hole in her side.
In the sand below her mouth a dirty brown foamy liquid had pooled and mixed with the blood. The same kind of liquid that had spilled out of her ears. She was about 7 years old.
The breeze drifted through the long grass and into the clearing of grey powdery sand where she lay, lifting the stench of rotting animal carcass into the air.
Frikkie Rossouw doesn’t notice. The investigator with the SANParks Environmental Crime Investigation (ECI) unit puts down his backpack and R1 rifle and moves around her quickly and efficiently, like someone who does this often, and who knows he has more to do that day.
“It’s not nice to see. Especially what happens often is some of these animals are pregnant, but you get used to it,” he says.
He’s 13 years from retirement, wiry, balding, with close-cropped hair, a round, tight face with a flattened nose. His eyes match the colour of his faded olive green overall, which has a zipper down the front.
Under his sandy eyebrows his eyes are nothing but two narrow slits when he squints into the light.
This was Monday. They found her the previous day, in the park’s Pretoriuskop section. It takes nearly 40 minutes driving down a rough two-track dirt road, and then a five-minute walk, to get there. She had been killed about five days earlier.
Rossouw had been right when he said it would be a smelly affair, but wrong about her being bloated, because they had sliced her stomach open from between her front legs to her hindquarters. On her back they had peeled back three large flaps of skin like pieces of thick carpet, exposing her spine and the top of her ribcage. The bones were a dirty brown and black, from the tissue covering it that had started to decompose. The vultures had already pecked out the meat. The area where her stomach and intestines would have been was nothing but a mound of dung.
(Dan Calderwood, News24)
Frikkie Rossouw photographs the crime scene before the investigation gets underway. (Dan Calderwood, News24)
“Yes, well, the poachers cut this animal open, cut the skin open, in order for the vultures to quickly get rid of the carcass, to feed on it. But it’s not common that they do it,” he says.
The poachers had shoved a thick branch under her nose, to stop her head from bouncing when they chopped both horns off, hacking deep into the nasal cavity.
“A sharp, big axe. Took them less than a minute,” says one of the field rangers, who has an R5 rifle across his chest, and whose job it is to keep the investigators safe from animals and poachers.
“Yes, they hacked quite deep into the nasal cavity,” Rossouw says.
“If this animal was still alive it probably wouldn’t have survived. And what also happens often is that you will see hack marks on the spine of the animal or the Achilles tendons, which means they shot the animal, but it wasn’t dead when they started hacking the horns off. And then they immobilise it by, you know, hacking the spine.”
They probably came from the park’s western boundary, the South African side, about 8km away.
It’s too late to call in the sniffer dogs since there is no fresh scent and the scavengers have wiped out all other evidence like footprints.
Often carcasses are only found three to four days later. The only thing to do is look for ballistic evidence.
“This is six days later. Dogs won’t be effective here and the suspects have already left the park,” Rossouw says.
Since rhino are not solitary creatures, she had probably been with a sub-adult calf and a bull, who both bolted when she was shot.
WATCH: This animation shows how crime scene analysts figure out how the rhino was killed
Rossouw begins to take photos, disturbing the flies as he goes around the carcass.
He puts a yellow plastic marker with the letter A on it on her side. It slides off. He picks it up and puts it back on, taking another photo.
From a tube in his bag he removes a plastic trajectory rod. He inserts one into the bullet hole. It juts from the hole at an angle, neon pink against the blue sky and yellow grass.
It’s the exit hole, he later guesses, because it’s a bit too big for an entry wound.
“Give me that L-shaped number 1,” he tells his assistant, Thembi. She hands him another yellow marker which he puts next to the rod and the hole and takes a photo.
He puts two knives on her flank. He takes a sharpener, presses it against the rhino’s flank and draws one of the knives through it a few times.
He scans the area around the bullet hole with a metal detector. It crackles and beeps.
“There’s something there,” he says, and slips on his green rubber gloves. The expensive ones keep the stink from clinging to his skin, he points out.
He sticks the knife into her, just behind her left front leg. Using both hands, he begins to saw up, towards the spine. The blade makes a dry, rasping sound, like cutting into a loaf of stale bread. The hide is dark grey on the outside with a layer of white fat underneath. He cuts out a rectangle about the size of a bath towel, with the bullet hole in its centre.
Standing at her spine, using a carving knife, he begins to separate the hide from the tissue below. Once he has some of the hide separated, he pulls a hook through it and hands it to Thembi, who is standing on the other side of the carcass. She pulls it back while he slices at the connective tissue underneath it, exposing pink muscle.
(edit gallery)
They cut off the flap and lay it on the ground, inside facing up. It has turned sickly green in places. Onto it Rossouw tosses the pieces of meat he carves from the area where he thinks the bullet hole is. Nhlanhla passes the metal detector over them. When the metal detector indicates nothing, they cut the meat into smaller pieces, and scan those.
“Is it complaining?” he asks about the metal detector’s beeping.
“Whatever it is, it’s small.”
They find it, almost by accident.
“It fell out of this piece of meat. Looks like a .375. A fairly popular calibre,” he says. The bronze-coloured, stained slug lies in his hand, the length of about two finger joints.
“It’s a strange shot. It’s funny. Unless there was more than one.”
The bullet he found did not make the hole.
“This wound that we saw here was not from the bullet that we retrieved. So there may have been a second shot.”
He saws through a rib closest to the front leg, down near the chest cavity and has to get his feet out of the way quickly as dark red blood spills out – a lot of it.
“Ja, this went straight through the heart.”
Both shots were fired from the rhino’s right side, the side she fell onto. The first stopped between her ribs, just under the skin. Then they came closer and fired again. That bullet went through.
“Quite often, especially with a .375, which is a high-velocity bullet, it goes straight through, and it’s not a very big animal. And that’s probably the reason why, well that one that we retrieved there, had that much to go and it would have been out,” he says, using his thumb and forefinger to show the distance.
Five or six years ago poachers would use much smaller calibres.
“Especially suspects from Mozambique, you would find them hunting with an AK-47 or the SKS, but that’s not the norm anymore. They all make use of heavy calibre rifles and the norm is either like this, a .375 or a 458. It’s fewer shots, so you’re not detected that easily. Quite often we also find these weapons with silencers on.”
The slug gets measured and photographed and put into a plastic ziplock bag. Rossouw takes his gloves off so he can write on the bag the police station, Skukuza; location, Pretoriuskop, and the date.
They use a small tablet computer to photograph the carcass and capture the latitude and longitude of its location and take a photo of the bag with the bullet.
Samples of tissue and hair are taken to be sent for DNA analysis at Onderstepoort, so the rhino can be linked to her horn “if it’s ever found”.
Rossouw and Thembi cut off pieces of the hair on her tail. Thembi cuts a square of hide from alongside the section that Rossouw sliced off. This goes into a separate jar. And another photo is taken.
“Hmmm, what else? The ear,” Rossouw says.
“Will you go and see if you can get some toenail,” he tells Thembi. She digs her knife in and saws off a piece. It’s dirty on the outside, but as she cuts into it the inside is white.
Each sample goes into its own clear plastic jar with a green lid and gets photographed next to the part of the body it was taken from.
http://showcase.news24.com/the-crime-scene.html
by Thomas Hartleb
Flies climbed over the maggots that writhed in the deep gashes on her face, in her nostrils and in her mouth – which was half opened, like someone exhaling in their sleep.
She had been lying out in the open for five days, with a small hole in her side.
In the sand below her mouth a dirty brown foamy liquid had pooled and mixed with the blood. The same kind of liquid that had spilled out of her ears. She was about 7 years old.
The breeze drifted through the long grass and into the clearing of grey powdery sand where she lay, lifting the stench of rotting animal carcass into the air.
Frikkie Rossouw doesn’t notice. The investigator with the SANParks Environmental Crime Investigation (ECI) unit puts down his backpack and R1 rifle and moves around her quickly and efficiently, like someone who does this often, and who knows he has more to do that day.
“It’s not nice to see. Especially what happens often is some of these animals are pregnant, but you get used to it,” he says.
He’s 13 years from retirement, wiry, balding, with close-cropped hair, a round, tight face with a flattened nose. His eyes match the colour of his faded olive green overall, which has a zipper down the front.
Under his sandy eyebrows his eyes are nothing but two narrow slits when he squints into the light.
This was Monday. They found her the previous day, in the park’s Pretoriuskop section. It takes nearly 40 minutes driving down a rough two-track dirt road, and then a five-minute walk, to get there. She had been killed about five days earlier.
Rossouw had been right when he said it would be a smelly affair, but wrong about her being bloated, because they had sliced her stomach open from between her front legs to her hindquarters. On her back they had peeled back three large flaps of skin like pieces of thick carpet, exposing her spine and the top of her ribcage. The bones were a dirty brown and black, from the tissue covering it that had started to decompose. The vultures had already pecked out the meat. The area where her stomach and intestines would have been was nothing but a mound of dung.
(Dan Calderwood, News24)
Frikkie Rossouw photographs the crime scene before the investigation gets underway. (Dan Calderwood, News24)
“Yes, well, the poachers cut this animal open, cut the skin open, in order for the vultures to quickly get rid of the carcass, to feed on it. But it’s not common that they do it,” he says.
The poachers had shoved a thick branch under her nose, to stop her head from bouncing when they chopped both horns off, hacking deep into the nasal cavity.
“A sharp, big axe. Took them less than a minute,” says one of the field rangers, who has an R5 rifle across his chest, and whose job it is to keep the investigators safe from animals and poachers.
“Yes, they hacked quite deep into the nasal cavity,” Rossouw says.
“If this animal was still alive it probably wouldn’t have survived. And what also happens often is that you will see hack marks on the spine of the animal or the Achilles tendons, which means they shot the animal, but it wasn’t dead when they started hacking the horns off. And then they immobilise it by, you know, hacking the spine.”
They probably came from the park’s western boundary, the South African side, about 8km away.
It’s too late to call in the sniffer dogs since there is no fresh scent and the scavengers have wiped out all other evidence like footprints.
Often carcasses are only found three to four days later. The only thing to do is look for ballistic evidence.
“This is six days later. Dogs won’t be effective here and the suspects have already left the park,” Rossouw says.
Since rhino are not solitary creatures, she had probably been with a sub-adult calf and a bull, who both bolted when she was shot.
WATCH: This animation shows how crime scene analysts figure out how the rhino was killed
Rossouw begins to take photos, disturbing the flies as he goes around the carcass.
He puts a yellow plastic marker with the letter A on it on her side. It slides off. He picks it up and puts it back on, taking another photo.
From a tube in his bag he removes a plastic trajectory rod. He inserts one into the bullet hole. It juts from the hole at an angle, neon pink against the blue sky and yellow grass.
It’s the exit hole, he later guesses, because it’s a bit too big for an entry wound.
“Give me that L-shaped number 1,” he tells his assistant, Thembi. She hands him another yellow marker which he puts next to the rod and the hole and takes a photo.
He puts two knives on her flank. He takes a sharpener, presses it against the rhino’s flank and draws one of the knives through it a few times.
He scans the area around the bullet hole with a metal detector. It crackles and beeps.
“There’s something there,” he says, and slips on his green rubber gloves. The expensive ones keep the stink from clinging to his skin, he points out.
He sticks the knife into her, just behind her left front leg. Using both hands, he begins to saw up, towards the spine. The blade makes a dry, rasping sound, like cutting into a loaf of stale bread. The hide is dark grey on the outside with a layer of white fat underneath. He cuts out a rectangle about the size of a bath towel, with the bullet hole in its centre.
Standing at her spine, using a carving knife, he begins to separate the hide from the tissue below. Once he has some of the hide separated, he pulls a hook through it and hands it to Thembi, who is standing on the other side of the carcass. She pulls it back while he slices at the connective tissue underneath it, exposing pink muscle.
(edit gallery)
They cut off the flap and lay it on the ground, inside facing up. It has turned sickly green in places. Onto it Rossouw tosses the pieces of meat he carves from the area where he thinks the bullet hole is. Nhlanhla passes the metal detector over them. When the metal detector indicates nothing, they cut the meat into smaller pieces, and scan those.
“Is it complaining?” he asks about the metal detector’s beeping.
“Whatever it is, it’s small.”
They find it, almost by accident.
“It fell out of this piece of meat. Looks like a .375. A fairly popular calibre,” he says. The bronze-coloured, stained slug lies in his hand, the length of about two finger joints.
“It’s a strange shot. It’s funny. Unless there was more than one.”
The bullet he found did not make the hole.
“This wound that we saw here was not from the bullet that we retrieved. So there may have been a second shot.”
He saws through a rib closest to the front leg, down near the chest cavity and has to get his feet out of the way quickly as dark red blood spills out – a lot of it.
“Ja, this went straight through the heart.”
Both shots were fired from the rhino’s right side, the side she fell onto. The first stopped between her ribs, just under the skin. Then they came closer and fired again. That bullet went through.
“Quite often, especially with a .375, which is a high-velocity bullet, it goes straight through, and it’s not a very big animal. And that’s probably the reason why, well that one that we retrieved there, had that much to go and it would have been out,” he says, using his thumb and forefinger to show the distance.
Five or six years ago poachers would use much smaller calibres.
“Especially suspects from Mozambique, you would find them hunting with an AK-47 or the SKS, but that’s not the norm anymore. They all make use of heavy calibre rifles and the norm is either like this, a .375 or a 458. It’s fewer shots, so you’re not detected that easily. Quite often we also find these weapons with silencers on.”
The slug gets measured and photographed and put into a plastic ziplock bag. Rossouw takes his gloves off so he can write on the bag the police station, Skukuza; location, Pretoriuskop, and the date.
They use a small tablet computer to photograph the carcass and capture the latitude and longitude of its location and take a photo of the bag with the bullet.
Samples of tissue and hair are taken to be sent for DNA analysis at Onderstepoort, so the rhino can be linked to her horn “if it’s ever found”.
Rossouw and Thembi cut off pieces of the hair on her tail. Thembi cuts a square of hide from alongside the section that Rossouw sliced off. This goes into a separate jar. And another photo is taken.
“Hmmm, what else? The ear,” Rossouw says.
“Will you go and see if you can get some toenail,” he tells Thembi. She digs her knife in and saws off a piece. It’s dirty on the outside, but as she cuts into it the inside is white.
Each sample goes into its own clear plastic jar with a green lid and gets photographed next to the part of the body it was taken from.
http://showcase.news24.com/the-crime-scene.html
Please check Needs Attention pre-booking: https://africawild-forum.com/viewtopic.php?f=322&t=596
- Richprins
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2015
A lot of effort...
Lots of stuff in media today, bottom line around 500 poachers killed since 2010, and experts suggest 1500-3000 rhino left in Kruger.
Also appeal for no bail for poaching suspects, as some get as little as R1500 bail.
Lots of stuff in media today, bottom line around 500 poachers killed since 2010, and experts suggest 1500-3000 rhino left in Kruger.
Also appeal for no bail for poaching suspects, as some get as little as R1500 bail.
Please check Needs Attention pre-booking: https://africawild-forum.com/viewtopic.php?f=322&t=596
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2015
Rand 1500 for bail... are ridiculous
Kgalagadi lover… for ever
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2015
From http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/ ... e-20150928
**Update OSCAP reports another carcass was found bringing this to 6 **
Five rhino killed at KZN game reserve
2015-09-28 12:00
Kaveel Singh, News24
Durban - Officials on Monday discovered five rhino that have been killed at a game reserve in KwaZulu-Natal.
Hluhluwe Game Reserve spokesperson Musa Mntambo confirmed to News24 that the rhino carcasses had just been found.
"An investigations team has been assembled and we are currently assessing the situation."
Rhino poaching has escalated this year with over 1 500 killed to date.
Mntambo previously stated that as of June this year, most rhino poached were in KwaZulu-Natal, with 13 killed in a single month.
"We are a few up in deaths compared to this time last year."
He said 44 arrests had been made this year so far in poaching cases.
**Update OSCAP reports another carcass was found bringing this to 6 **
Five rhino killed at KZN game reserve
2015-09-28 12:00
Kaveel Singh, News24
Durban - Officials on Monday discovered five rhino that have been killed at a game reserve in KwaZulu-Natal.
Hluhluwe Game Reserve spokesperson Musa Mntambo confirmed to News24 that the rhino carcasses had just been found.
"An investigations team has been assembled and we are currently assessing the situation."
Rhino poaching has escalated this year with over 1 500 killed to date.
Mntambo previously stated that as of June this year, most rhino poached were in KwaZulu-Natal, with 13 killed in a single month.
"We are a few up in deaths compared to this time last year."
He said 44 arrests had been made this year so far in poaching cases.
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Re: Rhino Poaching 2015
Not surprising as nobody seems to have been working in the KZN game reserves
"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." Nelson Mandela
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