Pretoria - South Africa plans to evacuate hundreds of rhino from the
famed Kruger National Park to safe havens out of horn smugglers' reach, the
environment minister announced on Tuesday.
"A decision has been made on this issue of translocation",
Edna Molewa said, announcing an action plan to curb escalating illegal hunts
for rhino horn.
"Relocations from the Kruger National Park and the creation of
rhino strongholds could allow the total rhino population size of South Africa
to continue to grow," she said.
The authorities "could relocate up to 500" rhino, which can
weigh a ton or more, said South African National Parks ecologist Sam Ferreira.
Illegal rhino killings have spiked from 13 in 2007 to 1 004 last year,
steadily increasing despite the deployment of soldiers in the vast nature
reserve, which is roughly the size of Wales or Israel.
No time frame
No time frame
The animals' horns - made from the same material as finger nails - are
coveted in some Asian countries as a traditional medicine and a status symbol.
There are thought to be as few as 8 400 white rhino and 2 000 black
rhino left in Kruger Park, which has been hardest hit by poaching, though other
national parks and private reserves have also fallen prey.
Now some rhino will be moved from areas of high poaching activity
inside the Kruger - such as the eastern boundary which forms the border with
Mozambique.
Most poachers are thought to be recruited from the
impoverished neighbouring country by middlemen who send the horns on through
organised crime syndicates.
The relocated rhino will find new homes in other state-owned
provincial parks, private parks and communal areas.
Neighbouring countries are also being considered as hosts,
according to the environmental ministry.
There is no time frame yet for the mass operation.
"We are looking at capturing about six to eight animals
a day in the cooler months", said the national parks head of veterinary
services Markus Hofmeyer.
The summer season returns to the country in the latter part
of the year, suggesting the moves might only be on the cards in the southern
hemisphere autumn next April.
Authorities spend about $2 000 to track and catch a rhino,
said Hofmeyer. Fees include helicopters, drugs and personnel, but exclude
transporting the animal.
"The cost implications vary", he said.
'Entrenched
problems'
Journalist Julian Rademeyer, author of the book on rhino poaching "Killing for Profit", said it had been clear for a long time the relocations would happen.
Journalist Julian Rademeyer, author of the book on rhino poaching "Killing for Profit", said it had been clear for a long time the relocations would happen.
"It was something that had to be done given the
entrenched problems", he said, referring to failed efforts to curb
poaching.
"It harkens back to some of the plans in the 1960s and
1970s that were instrumental in bringing the white rhino population back from
extinction", he told AFP.
The country has also relocated 1 450 animals from the park
in the past 15 years.
But Rademeyer warned that while breaking up the population
would make it harder for poachers to find the animals, there would always be
illegal hunters from poverty-stricken areas around nature reserves like in
Mozambique.
"You're dealing with communities where there are very
few opportunities, where corruption is rife, places that are steady recruitment
grounds", he said.
"The social problems that are helping to foster this
situation and that are providing poor people that serve as poachers, aren't
going to go away."
Courts have handed stiff sentences to poachers, but police
rarely catch the masterminds behind the illegal hunting and trade.
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