Rhino Poaching 2017-2025

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Re: Rhino Poaching 2017-2021

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Drones are a knife in the gunfight against poaching. But they’re leveling up

by Caitlin Looby on 18 October 2021

  • At the peak of the rhino poaching war in South Africa in 2015 and 2016, poachers slaughtered nearly three rhinos a day.
  • Although that rate has declined, the numbers are still disheartening and unsustainable, with poachers killing at least one rhino every day.
  • Some conservationists have looked to drones as a potentially powerful tool in anti-poaching efforts, with the technology continuing to evolve.
  • But experts say it isn’t at the level yet where it can meet the challenge, and that while it can be helpful, conservation efforts must continue to engage and educate local communities.


In 2016, during the height of the rhino poaching war, field rangers in Kruger National Park in South Africa saw sobering scenes day after day. The field reports showed just how bleak the situation was.

One log entry described discovery of “an adult female white rhino carcass … suspected to have been shot by the same poachers that killed the male, but both her horns were found intact and registered. The carcass was also estimated to be about 5 days old.”

In just one week, the Kruger National Park log reported more than 40 rhino carcasses. Five years later, these scenes are playing out with less frequency, but still happening at unsustainable rates.

“The government will tell you that the number of poaching incidents has decreased. Therefore, we’re winning the war on poaching,” says Robert Miller, founder of The Eye Above Anti-poaching Drone Project in South Africa. “What they’re not saying is the rhino population has crashed to such an extent that it’s becoming harder to find a rhino to poach.”

Image
A ranger at Kruger National Park in South Africa searches for a bullet inside a rhino carcass for poaching evidence. Image courtesy of Graham Dyer.

The two rhino species found in Africa are the white rhino (Ceratotherium simum) and the black rhino (Diceros bicornis). White rhinos are classified as near threatened by the IUCN, with about 18,000 individuals left in the declining population. In Kruger National Park, once believed to house the largest white rhino population in the world, the population plunged by 67% between 2011 and 2019 due to poaching. Black rhinos are listed as critically endangered, with approximately 5,500 individuals, although their numbers are rising.

Poachers have devastated the populations of iconic species like rhinos. With national parks and conservation areas covering large swaths of land, anti-poaching efforts are far from easy. And over the past few years, this has led some to look for a new weapon in the war: drones.

But experts say the drone technology isn’t quite there yet.

Drones are a tool in the anti-poaching toolbox, but they aren’t a silver bullet, says Graham Dyer, a former ranger and drone operator in Kruger National Park.

‘High-value’ targets
In 2015 and 2016, poachers killed three rhinos every day in South Africa. Although the poaching rate has dropped since then, the numbers are still staggering. In 2020, the number of rhinos poached in South Africa was the lowest in a decade, down to fewer than 400 a year, or one per day, most likely due to travel restrictions imposed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

But the extent of the killings isn’t completely clear, as governments often keep these numbers a secret, says Niall McCann, the director of conservation for National Park Rescue, a direct-action conservation organization in Zimbabwe.

Governments don’t want to advertise to the world that they’re struggling to control their borders, poachers or crime, McCann says. They also don’t want to draw attention to where the animals are or that they have a poaching problem.

Image
White rhino (Ceratotherium simum) in Kruger National Park in South Africa. Kruger once had what was thought to be the largest white rhino population in the world, but it plunged by 67% between 2011 and 2019 due to poaching. Image by Rhett A. Butler/Mongabay.

Poaching is a worldwide systemic issue driven by different motivations, McCann says. Locally, some people poach animals for subsistence. Another issue is illegal poaching for commercial markets. But there is also the classic, “high-value” poaching, where poachers target high-profile animals like rhinos, lions and elephants, primarily for their horns, claws or tusks. In the case of rhinos, poachers are after the horns for long-debunked medical uses or as a status symbol in East Asia. McCann says China is the biggest consumer market for these kinds of products.

Anti-poaching potential
Drones might be one of many tools to aid the fight against poaching. Drone technology is advancing quickly, Miller says. Current drones in use are mostly 3D printed. They also implement machine learning — i.e. they can be “taught” to use a combination of both visual and thermal technologies. For example, in South Africa, the temperature of the ground can be about the same temperature as a human body, but by using a combination of thermal and visual technologies, the operator can identify a human standing in front of a rock.

The drones that conservationists are testing are quiet and can fly long distances. Kruger National Park covers more than 19,600 square kilometers (7,500 square miles) — more than double the size of Yellowstone National Park in the United States. And the animals prized by poachers, like rhinos, are constantly roaming.

Even if there are a “thousand rangers on the ground in Kruger, they’re not even covering a fraction of the park,” Miller says.

Although drones can provide “eyes,” they can’t arrest or put handcuffs on the poachers, Dyer says. Rangers still must pursue and catch the poachers.

After some delays due to the pandemic, Miller’s team plans to launch a new set of drones with the latest technology in the coming weeks. But, he says, there is still no coherent plan to integrate drones with ground-level anti-poaching efforts yet.

Image
A ranger in Kruger National Park in South Africa packs up a drone early in the morning after flying all night. Image courtesy of Graham Dyer.

Dyer compares the effectiveness of drones with canine teams that he saw while working as a ranger, noting two problems that were solved by dogs that can’t be solved with drones. Canine teams were able to chase down the poacher until they climbed a tree. Rangers tracked the dogs’ locations and then apprehended the poachers when they got to the scene.

In one week, the canine team handcuffed 18 poachers “with obvious evidence,” Dyer says. “And it just kind of brought it home to me. We had not seen more than 12 poachers in a whole year.” The details of these kind of efforts are kept under wraps.

But drone may be more than just eyes: they could improve the tough working conditions for rangers.

“It is not easy to be a ranger on the ground because of the dangers involved, especially for ladies,” says Anita Mudenda, a member of the Mucheni community and ranger in Chizarira National Park in Zimbabwe. Rangers spend days out in the bush in extremely hot, muggy conditions, always on high alert.

Image
Female rangers on a sightseeing tour of Chizarira National Park in Zimbabwe on their first day working for National Park Rescue. They’re standing on the edge of the Mucheni Gorge, looking north toward Lake Kariba and Zambia. Image courtesy of Niall McCann.

But with the drones doing the spotting, “life would be much easier for us as most of our duties will be spent on reaction patrols,” Mudenda says.

Other risks to the rangers come from the poachers themselves. For a poacher to kill a rhino, they need a high-powered rifle, which means they’re likely to be well-trained, financed, and may use violence to avoid arrest, McCann says.

On top of these, rangers also have to worry about being attacked by animals, Mudenda says.

Next steps
Although drones aren’t a silver bullet, they still hold a lot of potential, especially in smaller reserves, Dyer says. Knowing drones are overhead can help deter poachers in the first place. For instance, in October 2014, Dyer surveilled the Pretoriuskop area in Kruger National Park for six weeks. The previous month, poachers there had killed nine rhinos. When the drones were airborne, there wasn’t a single recorded killing.

Image
A drone waiting for takeoff in Kruger National Park in South Africa. The operator is waiting for the rhino to leave the runway. Image courtesy of Graham Dyer.

Drones can also quickly assess a threat before rangers go out to check, Dyer says. For example, if something triggers an alarm on a boundary fence, a drone can quickly fly out and see if it was a poacher or an animal.

Dyer says drone technology may one day get to a point where the silent, flying machines can successfully patrol from dusk to dawn with little to no human intervention.

In the meantime, the most successful way to tackle the poaching problem is through community involvement and education, he says.

Rhino horns are made from keratin, the same material as human fingernails, and have no medicinal purpose, Dyer says. It’s important to educate people and give them resources to show that rhino horns are of no use to humans.

The local community should also be the first line of defense, says McCann, who adds that it’s vital to engage the community, get them to participate through informing, self-policing, and employment.

Image
The operation van from where rangers operate and monitor the drone during flights. Image courtesy of Graham Dyer.

“People need to have a tangible benefit from the conservation activities that are happening,” McCann says, adding this will empower community members to discourage their neighbors from committing illegal acts.

Conservation awareness efforts should also target schools “so that kids grow up knowing that poaching is not good for the world,” Mudenda adds.

“We deem our lives so precious, so are the animals.”


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Re: Rhino Poaching 2017-2021

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Podcast Review
This week we’re listening to: A riveting and disturbing foray into South Africa’s rhino-poaching crisis

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CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA - AUGUST 14: Anti Rhino Poaching artwork by artist, Andre Carl van der Merwe at the Sea Point promenade on August 14, 2014 in Cape Town, South Africa. Van der Merwe, created the piece under the Art54 project, it is his expression of the “sense of hopelessness” he feels towards rhino poaching. (Photo by Gallo Images / Nardus Engelbrecht)

By Ed Stoddard | 11 Nov 2021

In ‘The Invisible Hand’ Georgina Savage unpacks South Africa’s rhino-poaching crisis in an eight-part podcast that explores many of the issues surrounding this complex and unfolding drama.
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

This excellent series takes listeners on a journey into the dark heart of South Africa’s rhino-poaching crisis, asking searching questions that have become more relevant in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. The series is long – each chapter is more than an hour – so it is probably ideal for a road trip.

The Invisible Hand
  • Format: Podcast series
  • Year: 2021
  • The Invisible Hand is available on iTunes, Spotify and other podcast platforms
Savage was born in South Africa but emigrated to Australia with her family when she was young. In the opening chapter she returns to the land of her birth and hooks up with a cousin whose husband works as a head ranger in the Kruger Park, and the narrative takes off from there.

Savage has a telling eye for descriptive detail, which helps listeners visualise the scenes.

Sometimes they are graphic. Visiting a rhino crime scene, she finds “an enormous carcass, face bloodied where its horns once were… I can see grass in her mouth, which means she was feeding at the time she was killed.”

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A rhino after it is sedated on October 16, 2014 in the Kruger National Park, South Africa. SANParks staff members moved rhinos from the Kruger National Park yesterday. (Photo by Gallo Images / Foto24 / Cornel van Heerden)

The forensics team on-site begins cutting the dead rhino’s flesh as they search with a metal detector for the bullets lodged in the body.

“I quickly touch her face. It’s rough like a tyre and she has thick, prickly hairs. Her nostrils are silky soft though, and her eyelashes long and lush … the raw smell of flesh is becoming very strong.”

In Chapter V she plays audio clips from news reports about a rhino poacher who was killed by an elephant and then eaten by lions, or was killed by a lion – the clips cannot quite agree on the cause of death, beyond the fact that it was a big animal that killed a poacher of big animals; and then people laughing about the death of a human being, who was probably driven to poaching by poverty and lack of economic opportunity.

“It’s been a good week,” says one presenter to laughter from another.

“I vividly remember the first time I heard this story. I was watching a viral news report. A news report in which a poacher was mauled by a lion. I watched as the social media storm swelled violently around the piece. I read comment after comment celebrating the loss of this man’s life,” Savage narrates.

“People who had likely never been to South Africa or Mozambique, and never would, but had their own justified understanding of what was going on in this scenario of lion kill man trying to kill a rhino.”

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Johan Hume’s rhinos roam around at his farm during his interview about the court battle victory to amputate and sell horns on May 28, 2016 in Klerksdorp, South Africa. (Photo by Gallo Images / Rapport / Deon Raath)

The series is wide-ranging and takes a gloves-off approach to thorny subjects.

The cast of characters Savage has interviewed is huge: rangers, poachers, villagers, historians, scientists, conservationists and game farmers.

The series was meant to continue in Vietnam – a key market for rhino horn – but the Covid-19 pandemic reared its ugly head. But while much of the reporting for the series was done two years ago, it hardly seems dated. And the issues it explores, such as the links between poverty and poaching and suggested policies to address this, including a basic income grant, are more relevant than ever.

Savage told Maverick Life she is hoping to continue the series with reporting from Asia, so stay tuned. In the meanwhile, if you find yourself on a long drive into the South African bush, this podcast is a worthy companion. DM/ML


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Re: Rhino Poaching 2017-2021

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isimangaliso
Suspected poacher still missing

16 Nov 2021

Image

On Friday, 12 November 2021 at about 09h30, field rangers who were holding an Observation post at Mfabeni Game Reserve reported hearing a gun shot being fired to the north of Tewate Wilderness Area on the Eastern Shores of Lake St Lucia at iSimangaliso Wetland Park

The Field Rangers called for a backup and a helicopter with four additional field rangers was immediately dispatched. As the helicopter flew above the area, two boats at the bank of the Lake were spotted. A decision was immediately taken to monitor the area nearby the boats as it was suspected that the poachers who had left those boats will return for them. The four rangers disembarked from the helicopter and began patrolling the area on foot.

As they were patrolling, at a distance, four poachers were observed walking towards the two boats. It was further noted that one poacher was carrying a gun. As the four poachers were about to push the boats back to the river, from a safe distance, one Field Ranger cautioned the poachers to surrender.

Unexpectedly, one of the poachers started shooting towards where the Rangers had positioned themselves. The field rangers returned fire. When the shooting ceased, the field rangers moved towards the boat that an armed poacher had fired shots from.

The suspected poachers ran in different directions during the shoot-out. Field Rangers further observed blood in the water which made them suspect that one poacher, probably the one with a gun, had been shot. He might have attempted to avert arrest by jumping into the water.

Poaching incidents are very rife in this area. Two months ago, a white rhino was poached, and its horns were stolen. Recently a newly poached hippo carcass was discovered about 1 km away from the current scene of incident.

The search for the missing poacher is still ongoing with the local community participating in the search. The other three suspect poachers are also still at large.

Media enquiries should be directed to Musa Mntambo on 083 284 9586 or Bheki Manzini on 060 533 2082 or bhekimanzini@isimangaliso.com.


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Re: Rhino Poaching 2017-2021

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Pregnant rhino among four killed at Western Cape reserve, fake synthetic horn taken
09 December 2021 - 16:53
Aron Hyman Reporter


Image
Three of the four rhinos killed for their horns in the Western Cape on December 8 2021.
Image: Inverdoorn Game Farm

Poachers behind the Wednesday night massacre of four rhinos at Inverdoorn private game reserve north of Cape Town sawed off a fake and worthless fibreglass horn from one of the animals they shot.

In a press release on Thursday, Inverdoorn owner Searl Derman said he and the reserve’s management and staff were traumatised after an anti-poaching patrol found the rhinos. One was pregnant and had her horns hacked off.

Derman said he was “horrified to relive this nightmare”, referring to a 2011 rhino-poaching incident at the nearby Aquila private game reserve, which he also owns.

The reserve is offering a R100,000 reward for anyone with confidential information which could lead to the successful prosecution of the poachers.

Derman said the incident came when the wildlife tourism industry was being decimated by “continued unjustified international travel bans”.

According to the press statement, Inverdoorn’s 24-hour anti-poaching unit raised the alarm at 10.30pm on Wednesday. The team found two dead rhinos and two that had survived serious injuries.


“The team acted fast as a fifth rhino was missing, and tracking operations were immediately activated on the 10,000ha reserve while the management, conservation teams, wildlife veterinarians, law enforcement and others were notified and dispatched to the scene,” read the statement.

Large-calibre rifle rounds from silenced weapons were identified on the scene.

“Sadly, the anti-poaching unit soon confirmed the death of the two injured rhinos. According to management, one of the killed females was pregnant,” read the statement.


At about 2am on Thursday, an anti-poaching team found the fifth “painfully injured” female rhino that was shot in the face.

Derman said that as with the previous poaching incident at Aquila they would again commit to “sparing no expense or effort in the pursuit to catch and bring justice to these vicious perpetrators who massacred our rhino”.

He added: “We are starting by offering a R100,000 reward for confidential information that will lead to the successful arrest of the criminals that brought much heartache and loss to the staff and management of this reserve.”

The statement said Inverdoorn had previously performed a ground-breaking technique of dehorning some of their rhino and replacing the horns with synthetic ones.

It was hoped that this widely publicised technique, together with signage on the reserve fencing, would deter poachers. It did not. “One of the slaughtered rhino had a realistic and lifelike fibreglass horn with zero value to these poachers,” read the statement.

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Re: Rhino Poaching 2017-2021

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:evil: :evil: @#$ @#$ 0= 0=


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@#$ O/


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Re: Rhino Poaching 2017-2021

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Private game reserve bemoans lack of government support after four rhinos killed

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Four rhinos were found massacred (one a pregnant female) on Wednesday night, 8 December 2021, at Inverdoorn Private Game Reserve, just outside of Cape Town. (Photo: Inverdoorn Private Game Reserve)

By Julia Evans | 10 Dec 2021

Four rhinos were killed by poachers in a private game reserve just outside of Cape Town – highlighting government inaction in dealing with rhino conservation.
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This article contains graphic images that may upset sensitive readers.

During a routine patrol on Wednesday night an anti-poaching unit found four rhinos dead and one injured, with their horns hacked off at Inverdoorn Private Game Reserve, just outside Cape Town.

Johan van Schalkwyk, group marketing manager for Aquila Collection, a portfolio of private game reserves in the Western Cape (including Inverdoorn), told Daily Maverick, “There were five rhinos injured and four of them succumbed to their injuries. One is still alive and mobile.”

Van Schalkwyk said that of the four rhinos found by the anti-poaching unit, two had already succumbed to their injuries, while the remaining two, although still alive, were heavily injured. They later died – one was pregnant.

At approximately 10:30pm the game reserve’s Anti-Poaching Unit raised the alarm and activated a tracking operation to find the fifth missing rhino on the 10,000 hectare game reserve, while the management, conservation teams, wildlife veterinarians, law enforcement and others were notified and dispatched to the scene.

At about 2am the unit found a fifth injured female rhino, shot in the face, still alive.

Van Schalkwyk said that large-calibre rifle rounds from silenced weapons were found on the scene and patrols were intensified to protect all against the heavily armed perpetrators.

The South African Police Service and CapeNature were contacted and arrived on the scene to assist with the investigation.

Searl Derman, the owner of Inverdoorn Private Game Reserve, said on Thursday evening, “It’s been a horrific experience, everyone is very tired. We are very grateful to the… police and CapeNature who’ve sent us professionals… and are really committed to solving this case and finding the perpetrators, the poachers.”

According to the latest available data released by the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE) on 31 July, 249 rhinos were poached for their horns in South Africa between January and the end of June.

The DFFE provided this provincial and national breakdown for January to June 2021 (in comparison to 2019 and 2020):

Image

Albi Modise, chief director of communications for the DFFE, said the official rhino poaching statistics for 2021 would be released early in 2022.

“During the initial hard lockdown period, there was almost celebration in the industry of low numbers [of rhinos killed by poachers], and that was just due to very strict and forced movement of people,” said Van Schalkwyk.

“Recent reports have shown an increase in activity, but especially to the north of South Africa. I think that can mostly be attributed to the poverty of the situation and the ongoing pandemic and desperate communities.”

Van Schalkwyk explained how poachers typically operate.

“Usually, they would obviously breach the perimeter, have some insights on the location of the rhino at a particular time, and then shoot with silenced weapons, usually from a very close range so that it has full impact, and when the rhino is then demobilised, they literally hack the rhino horn.”

Van Schalkwyk reported that a wildlife veterinarian team under the leadership of Johan Marais was immediately dispatched to assess the injuries of the fifth maimed rhino, and they were considering facial reconstructive surgery as a matter of priority.

“She is obviously bolting and not letting anyone close to her,” said Van Schalkwyk. “The vets and CapeNature and teams are monitoring the situation and they’re waiting for the perfect time to dart her.

Image
Searl Derman, owner of Inverdoorn Private Game Reserve said on Thursday evening, “it’s been a horrific experience, everyone is very tired. We very grateful to the South African Police and Cape Nature who’ve sent us professionals… and are really committed to solving this case and finding the perpetrators, the poachers.” (Photo: Inverdoorn Private Game Reserve)

“It’s been a traumatic experience for everyone. We’re doing everything in our power to gather all the evidence, and in the same breath, to try save the other rhino that’s taken a bullet to the head,” said Derman, adding that the rhino lost a lot of blood and was limping on Wednesday but seemed to be more mobile the following day.

Derman, who is also the owner of the Aquila Collection, said that as was the case with the collection’s previous poaching incident in 2011, they would spare no expense or effort to catch the poachers, and that they had already instituted a private forensic investigative team and private investigators on local, regional and national levels.

“We will do everything in our power to catch the perpetrators, as we did last time. And we were instrumental in catching them and putting more than one syndicate away,” Derman said.

Government involvement

“It’s important to understand that the private costs that these organisations and lodges have is astronomical, and there’s little to no government support,” said Van Schalkwyk.

“We don’t have the SANDF or CapeNature rangers to support us. It’s a private effort to keep conservation alive.”

Van Schalkwyk said that during the last poaching incident in 2011, the SA National Defence Force was active in the Kruger National Park and other state-owned reserves, while organised crime, as opposed to opportunistic poachers, were branching off to attack private game reserves. He said private lodges could not afford the resources to protect their rhinos.

Kim da Ribeira, the director of Outraged South African Citizens Against Rhino Poaching, told Daily Maverick, “It is in the Minister’s [Barbara Creecy’s] best interest to actually get involved. Unfortunately, my experience is that there is a lot of discussion and little actually comes of decisions taken.”

“Although they speak of it, there’s been no real action on the ground,” said Van Schalkwyk. “We are thankful for some of the work that the SANDF and the training partners have been doing. But the private game reserves of South Africa are really on their own.”

“I’m shocked that we lose any rhino at all to poaching anymore,” said Da Ribeira. “Government still has to show the political will to end this crisis; they should show true leadership and address corruption at every level.”

The DFFE’s Modise told Daily Maverick that the department was aware of this incident and said, “The South African Police Service is currently investigating the case. The Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment will get involved if we are requested to do so.”

“It’s sad that it takes a situation like this particular incident to put light on this on a national level,” said Van Schalkwyk.” DM/OBP


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About 24 rhino carcasses found in SA game reserves in past two weeks

15 December 2021 - 09:37
Kgaugelo Masweneng Reporter



Since the beginning of December, 24 rhino carcasses have been found in game reserves across SA, the department of forestry, fisheries and environment said.

KwaZulu-Natal recorded six deaths, Mpumalanga and the Kruger National Park reported seven each and the Western Cape four, said department spokesperson Albi Modise.

The department condemns the continued poaching of these “iconic species for their horn, and commends the work being done by rangers and security officials over the festive period to stem the killing of rhino”, Modise said.

In the first 14 days of December, nine alleged poachers were arrested, he said.

The department will provide an update on the total number of rhinos killed for their horn this year early in 2022.

The most recent case that grabbed the attention of the sector was that of the four rhinos massacred at the Inverdoorn Private Game Reserve outside Cape Town on Wednesday.


One of the massacred rhinos was a pregnant female and another female is recovering from injuries.

Searl Derman, owner of Inverdoorn Private Game Reserve, said the 24-hour Anti-Poaching Unit raised the alarm when they found the horrific scene while on regular patrols.

“The team acted fast as a fifth rhino was missing. Tracking operations were immediately activated on the 10,000 hectare reserve while management, conservation teams, wildlife veterinarians, law enforcement and others were notified and dispatched to the scene.

“Large calibre rifle rounds from silenced weapons were identified on the scene and patrols were intensified to protect all against the heavily armed perpetrators,” said Derman.

Richard Yolk, CEO Wildlife Ranching SA, said it was common to see a rise in poaching during the festive season.

“We see this sort of increase in poaching at times like these because people are relaxed and have let their guard down. With the rains it is also hard to see tracks as they are washed away.”

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Image

WHERE HAVE ALL THE RHINOS GONE?

BY EMS FOUNDATION - 20TH DECEMBER 2021 - EMS FOUNDATION

PREFACE

On the 22nd of September 2021−World Rhino Day−the acting head of South African National Parks, Dr Luthando Dziba, said that there may be fewer than 3000 rhinoceroses left in the Kruger National Park. Dziba also confirmed that South Africa’s rhino population had declined by nearly two-thirds in just ten years.

The primary threat to rhinos is human demand for their horns which are sold on the black markets of Southeast Asia as aphrodisiacs, so-called traditional medicine or as a status symbol.

Only a decade ago South Africa was home to the world’s largest population of White Rhino (Ceratotherium simum) and Black Rhino (Diceros bicornis), this equated to approximately 90% of the global population of southern white rhino and 36% of the world’s black rhino population.

Since 2008 there has been a cataclysmic increase in the number of rhinos killed for their horn. The reported number of rhinos killed for their horn in South Africa since 2008 is 9067.

The number of white rhinos living in South Africa’s flagship national park, the Kruger National Park declined by 60.42% in just a six-year period, from an estimated 8,968 in 2013 to an estimated 3,549 in 2019, while the black rhino population fell by 57.25% in a 10-year period, from an estimated 627 in 2009 to an estimated 268 in 2019.1

The data contained in the first chapter of this report illustrates the confusing and in concise figures regarding the official rhino population figures that have been reported and repeated over the past twenty years.

What happened to the Biodiversity Management Plan (BMP) for white rhino−a draft of which was gazetted for comment in March 2015? The announced target was aligned to the escalating poaching statistics. The world was informed by the South African government that a realistic achievable goal of a meta-population of at least 20 400 white rhinos in South Africa was entirely achievable for the year 2020, this bearing in mind that 1349 rhino were poached in 2015.

Where Have All the Rhino Gone, is a compilation of, and expansion on, the work previously carried out by researchers and investigative journalists over the past two decades. The Information contained in this retrospective report sets out to illustrate the questionable decisions that have been made over the past two decades regarding the protection and conservation of South Africa’s rhino.

The content of this report is limited to the past two decades, the time period that will forever be marked by a magnitude of government corruption and the capture and destruction of the South African justice system. It would be foolish to believe that South Africa’s environmental sector and the conservation and protection of wildlife that resides within it, has remained unscathed.

South Africa is meant to be responsible for the protection and conservation of the majority of the world’s remaining rhinos. In order to establish just what the ‘majority’ means in a reliable numerical format we would need to obtain absolute accurate data from all the African rhino range states and South Africa as a matter of priority.

The scientific advisory organisations should be urged to recommend to the United Nations that there should be a global moratorium on the trade and hunting of all rhinos until it can be established, unequivocally, how many rhinos exist in Africa today.

There can no longer be any debate−the next decade is critical for the survival of the species, and this needs to take place within a revised policy framework which foregrounds protection, welfare, well-being and a one health approach.

CONCLUSION

The EMS Foundation is a South African based social justice NGO established in November 2016. Our key purpose is to alleviate and end suffering, raise public awareness and lobby and empower, provide dignity and promote the rights and interests of vulnerable groups, particularly children, the elderly and wild animals.

The EMS Foundation is committed to contributing to the improvement of wildlife governance. With an area of nearly two million hectares, the Kruger National Park situated in the north of South Africa is one of the continents largest game reserves. The South African government is responsible for the care and protection of the world’s largest remaining white and black rhino populations. The current estimated numbers of black and white rhinos in South Africa’s flagship national park are extremely concerning.

This report has highlighted the fact that hundreds of rhinos were knowingly exported from the Kruger National Park to trophy hunters, some of whom ignited the rhino horn trade in Vietnam. Rhinos were also exported to zoos whilst at the same time thousands of rhinos were being illegally killed in the Kruger National Park.

Close examinations of the agreements made with hunters, by investigators, has revealed that anomalies were overlooked in order to facilitate the acquisition of the rhinos.

Furthermore, in 2019 the National Union of Public Service and Allied Workers accused the Kruger National Park of perpetuating nepotism, corruption and maladministration. It was alleged that the outsourcing of services at SANParks was organised to enrich a few individuals.

This report has highlighted and expanded upon, what investigative journalists highlighted many years ago about State Capture and the Kruger National Park. They ask, as do we, what policies and procedures does SANParks have in place to avoid real or perceived conflicts of interests specifically involving holders of high political office in its spending?

We all argue that SANParks has a duty to avoid repeating the same mistakes, although an organ of government, SANParks is reliant on revenue generated from consumers. We are disheartened to learn of the large financial contribution being withdrawn because of maladministration.

On the 2nd May 2021, when Minister Creecy released the High Level Panel Report −which reviewed policies, legislation and practises related to the management, breeding, hunting, trade and handling of elephant, lion, leopard and rhinoceros− she made the 2nd of May 2021, Minister Creecy released the Report of the High-Level Panel of Experts, the Minister made the following statement:

“Despite South Africa’s reputation as a global leader in conservation, there are still reported incidents and perceptions of irresponsible, unethical and unsustainable conservation practices in the management, breeding, hunting, trade and handling of elephant, lion, leopard and rhinoceros, especially in terms of animal welfare and well-being, that negatively affect the country’s conservation reputation and do not bode well for the country’s international standing and development objectives.”

Notwithstanding the alarming figures that have been released of the vastly diminished rhino populations in South Africa, on the 8th of October 2021 the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and Environment released a government gazette notice on the proposed hunting and or export of elephant, black rhinoceros and leopard hunting trophies for the 2021 calendar year.

Hindsight is a wonderful thing. Queen Elizabeth II once said:

“To all those who have suffered as a consequence of our troubled past, I extend my sincere thoughts and deep sympathy. With the benefit of historical hindsight, we can all see things which we would wish had been done differently, or not at all.“

Please find the FULL REPORT ON THEIR WEBSITE: https://emsfoundation.org.za/where-have ... no-gone-2/


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Re: Rhino Poaching 2017-2021

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This report has highlighted and expanded upon, what investigative journalists highlighted many years ago about State Capture and the Kruger National Park. They ask, as do we, what policies and procedures does SANParks have in place to avoid real or perceived conflicts of interests specifically involving holders of high political office in its spending?

Thank you!

Africa Wild has been warning about the nonsense rhino figures and maladministration for a decade too! O/


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