Yahoo News 12 Jan 11;
JOHANNESBURG (AFP) – South Africa lost 333 rhinos to poaching in 2010, the highest number ever recorded and almost triple the previous year's losses, the country's parks agency said on Wednesday.
"This has definitely been the worst year for rhino poaching -- this is the highest number ever recorded," National Parks Agency spokesman Reynold Thakhuli told AFP.
However the agency said anti-poaching programmes were yielding results. Five suspected poachers were shot dead at the world-famous Kruger National Park in the last four days.
"Since the beginning of this year a total of five more poachers have died when rangers acted in self-defence after poachers opened fire on them," said parks agency chief executive Dr David Mabunda in a statement.
Kruger suffered the worst losses in 2010, with 146 rhinos killed there.
"It is more worrying that rangers are often greeted by the poachers' firepower without warning," Mabunda said.
Police have arrested 162 people linked to rhino crimes at various levels, ranging from actual poachers to couriers and kingpins, but South Africa has already lost five rhinos in 2011, he added.
South Africa is home to more than 70 percent of the world's remaining rhinos and experts blame a booming black-market demand for horns, which saw the number of the animals killed almost treble from 122 in 2009.
The use of rhino horn in Asian traditional medicine has continued to feed demand and more recently, researchers say, a belief that rhino horn can cure cancer has emerged in Vietnam.
Conservationists estimate there are around 25,000 rhinos left globally, with three species in Asia and two in Africa.
Asia's rhino populations have already been pushed to the brink of extinction by hunting and deforestation.
'Rhino poachers' shot dead in South Africa
BBC News 12 Jan 11;
Five suspected rhino poachers have been shot dead in South Africa's biggest game park in the last four days.
Park officials say that three suspects were killed in a shootout with police in the Pretoriuskop area of the Kruger National Park on Tuesday.
Another two were killed near the border with Mozambique on Saturday.
In 2010, 333 rhinos were shot in South Africa for their horns, which are sold in the black market for medicine and aphrodisiacs in Asia.
The figure represents a rise of about 10% from the previous year.
Thriving business
The five suspected poachers were killed in shootouts with South Africa's elite police unit - the Hawks.
The unit has been tracking down organised syndicates which often use high-tech equipment and helicopters in the Kruger National Park.
Officials say two rhino horns and a high-calibre hunting rifle were found at the scene of one of the shootings.
However, three suspects managed to flee across the border.
The Hawks have conceded that it is difficult to catch the masterminds - as only people who do the ground work have been arrested.
The Kruger National Park is one of the biggest in the world: it links reserves reserves along South Africa's borders with Mozambique and Zimbabwe.
South Africa is home to 90% of the continent's white rhino population.
Many arrests have been made by South African police in recent months and the cases are currently before the courts.
But poaching continues to thrive despite a tightening of anti-poaching laws in the country, the authorities say.
Rhino poaching in South Africa reaches highest ever levels in 2010
WWF 12 Jan 11;
Killings continue unabated in first days of 2011
A total of 333 rhinos were illegally killed in South Africa in 2010, including ten critically endangered black rhinos, according to national park officials. The yearly total is the highest ever experienced in South Africa and nearly triple 2009 when 122 rhinos were killed in the country. An additional five rhinos have been lost to poaching since the new year.
Kruger National Park, the world famous safari destination, was hardest hit losing 146 rhinos to poaching in 2010, authorities said. The park is home to the largest populations of both white and black rhinos in the country. Rhinos constitute one of the much-revered “Big 5” of African wildlife tourism, including elephants, lions, leopards and Cape buffalo.
Rhino poaching across Africa has risen sharply in the past few years, threatening to reverse hard-won population increases achieved by conservation authorities during the 20th century. The first alarming yearly spike occurred in 2008 when 83 rhinos were lost. South Africa has responded by intensifying its law enforcement efforts, and made approximately 162 poaching arrests last year.
“Many more successful convictions, backed up by appropriately daunting penalties will significantly demonstrate the South African government’s commitment to preventing the clouding of the country’s excellent rhino conservation track record that it has built up over the past several decades,” said Dr. Morné du Plessis, CEO of WWF South Africa.
The current wave of poaching is being committed by sophisticated criminal networks using helicopters, night-vision equipment, veterinary tranquilisers and silencers to kill rhinos at night while attempting to avoid law enforcement patrols.
“The criminal syndicates operating in South Africa are highly organised and use advanced technologies. They are very well coordinated,” said Dr. Joseph Okori, WWF African Rhino Programme Manager. “This is not typical poaching.”
The recent killing increase is largely due to heightened demand for rhino horn, which has long been prized as an ingredient in traditional Asian medicine. It has been claimed recently that rhino horn possesses cancer-curing properties, despite there being no medical evidence to support the assertion.
“Only a concerted international enforcement pincer movement, at both ends of the supply and demand chain, can hope to nip this rhino poaching crisis in the bud,” said Tom Milliken, Director of TRAFFIC’s East and Southern Africa programme. Milliken pointed to recently established coordination links between officials in South Africa and Vietnam, the country heavily implicated in the recent poaching surge.
South Africa is home to approximately 21,000 rhinos, more than any other country in the world. Black rhinos are listed as critically endangered with only about 4,200 remaining in existence, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Approximately 1,670 black rhinos were believed to be living in South Africa in 2009. The country's other resident species, white rhinos, are classified as near threatened on IUCN’s Red List of threatened species.
“The recovery of African white rhinos from less than 100 in the late 19th century to more than 20,000 today is a phenomenal conservation success story that can largely be attributed to the combined efforts of South Africa’s state and private conservation authorities. Consumers of rhino horn across Asia, and in Vietnam in particular, are now seriously compromising this achievement by motivating criminal groups to kill rhinos. In order to halt this massacre, substantial resources need to go into law enforcement, both in Africa and in Asian consumer countries where all trade in rhino horn is illegal," said Dr. du Plessis.
In South Africa, WWF’s Black Rhino Range Expansion Project aims to increase the overall numbers of black rhino by making available additional breeding lands. This is done by forming partnerships with owners of large areas of natural black rhino habitat. So far, 98 black rhino have been translocated to new range lands and at least 26 calves have been born on project sites. In December 2010, South Africa’s Eastern Cape Parks and Tourism Authority committed to donating 20 black rhino to the project in an effort to aid South Africa in reaching its national target of 5,000 black rhinos.
In October 2010, TRAFFIC facilitated a visit of five South African officials to Vietnam to discuss strategies for combating the illegal rhino horn trade. TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade monitoring network, is a joint programme of WWF and IUCN.