11
Poachers Killed in Rhino War!
January
22 2014 at 07:56am
By Tony Carnie
By Tony Carnie
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| A group of SANDF soldiers listen to their platoon commander as they prepare to go out on a night patrol in Kruger National Park. File picture: Phill Magakoe |
Durban
- South Africa’s rhino war for this year is off to another bloody start with
seven poachers killed in a series of weekend gunfights with rangers in the
Kruger National Park.
Eleven
suspected poachers have been killed this month alone in the flagship national
park by SA National Parks (SANParks) rangers and members of the SA Defence
Force. Most of the gun battles happened at night after poaching gangs crossed
the border from Mozambique.
At
least 40 rhinos have been shot by poachers inside Kruger this month, with no
let-up in the bloody rhino war that led to the record slaughter of 1 004 rhinos
nationwide last year.
On
Tuesday afternoon, the Officer Commanding the Kruger Rangers Corp,
Major-General (Ret) Johan Jooste, revealed that there were “multiple incursions
of up to 15 heavily armed (poaching) groups in Kruger at any given time”,
especially during the full moon period when poachers were able to stalk rhinos
at night in the hope of evading detection from the air and ground by
anti-poaching patrols.
“They
operate in groups of four to six. They are aggressive and engage and shoot at
the rangers on sight, creating a daily, life-threatening situation,” he said.
Jooste
said the recent recovery of a handgun at a contact scene suggested elevated
levels of aggression from the poaching groups.
The
latest deaths happened this weekend when there were four separate engagements
between poachers and rangers in different parts of the 2-million hectare park.
SANParks
said in a statement it was “appealing to the South African public to support
efforts by rangers to stop the massacre of our natural heritage by greedy
poachers, who are promised wealth by syndicates”.
Rangers
also confiscated four hunting rifles, ammunition, poaching equipment and a pair
of horns at the weekend.
The
death of the seven latest suspects brings to 11 the number of poachers killed
in contacts with SANParks rangers and military units this month.
Jooste
said at least 123 rhino poaching suspects had been arrested last year inside
Kruger. Nationwide, at least 343 suspects were arrested last year.
“We
would like to ask the public, law enforcement agencies and our counterparts in
Mozambique, to play their part, match the work that is being done by the
rangers and we will reap the rewards and win this war,” he said.
SANParks
did not respond to queries on Tuesday on how many suspected poachers had been
killed in Kruger last year.
Last
week, the wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC noted that the death toll
of 1 004 rhinos last year was the worst on record.
“The
figure is more than 1.5 times the official figure of 668 rhinos killed for
their horns in 2012 and brings South Africa’s white rhino population ever
closer to the tipping point when deaths will outnumber births and the
population will go into serious decline,” it said.
Mozambique
was widely seen as both a transit point for rhino horn smuggling activities and
an operational base for poachers who cross the border to kill rhinos.
“South
Africa and Mozambique must decisively up their game if they hope to stop this
blatant robbery of southern Africa’s natural heritage,” Tom Milliken, TRAFFIC’s
rhino expert, said.
This
year “must mark the turning point where the world, collectively, says ‘enough
is enough’ and brings these criminal networks down. Rhino horn trafficking and
consumption are not simply environmental issues, they represent threats to the
fabric of society”.

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