Kenia: Woman fined Sh40,000 over illegal ivory

Thailand's Thararat Noiphoromma at the Makadara law courts where she was charged with being in possession of illegal ivory weighing 19.5 kg and valued at Ksh 195 000 while on transit from  Mozambique to Bangkok, Thailand. She was fined Sh 40,000 December 27, 2010. PHOEBE OKALL

Thailand’s Thararat Noiphoromma at the Makadara law courts where she was charged with being in possession of illegal ivory weighing 19.5 kg and valued at Ksh 195 000 while on transit from Mozambique to Bangkok, Thailand. She was fined Sh 40,000 December 27, 2010. PHOEBE OKALL 

By RICHARD MUNGUTI Posted Monday, December 27 2010 at 14:33

A Thai national, arrested on Saturday at Kenya’s main airport while attempting to smuggle ivory products, has been fined Sh40,000.

Thararati Noiphoroma pleaded guilty to being in possession of 19.5kilogrammes of assorted ivory cargo manufactured from elephant tusks worth Sh 195,000.

She was arrested at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) enroute to Bangkok, Thailand from Mozambique. The woman’s luggage contained 105 pieces of ivory bangles, necklaces and two elephant tusks.

In her mitigation through lawyer Cliff Ombeta , the foreigner, who was on transit wondered why the Kenyan authorities arrested and detained  her yet she bought the ivory in a street in Mozambique.

“My client is wondering why she was detained yet in her country, Mozambique, where she is married to an African these game trophies are bought in open market. It is a free trade in Mozambique.“

Mr Ombeta said she had bought the bangles as presents to her relatives back home.

The magistrate also heard that the accused was in the company of her six year old child “who is still at the JKIA waiting for her mother".

"I urge this court to exercise leniency in the spirit of Christmas and new year. She can even be freed without being fined,“ Mr Ombeta urged the magistrate.

But the court directed the accused to pay a fine of Sh20,000 or face one year in default for the offence of being in possession of illegal ivory and failing to report to the relevant authorities.

She was also fined Sh20,000 or serve one year in default for dealing in ivory.

Source: www.nation.co.ke/News/Woman fined Sh40,000 over illegal ivory/-/1056/1079204/-/o5cpkm/-/

Kenia: Thai woman arrested in JKIA ivory bust

NAIROBI, Kenya, Dec 26 – A suspect from Thailand was arrested at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) on Saturday night with 19.5 kg of illegal ivory.

Police intercepted her on routine patrol while she was checking into a Kenya Airways flight at 11.30pm with 105 pieces of ivory bangles, necklaces and raw ivory while on transit from Maputo, Mozambique, to Bangkok, Thailand.
“She is expected to be arraigned before a magistrate at the Makadara Law Courts in Nairobi on Monday morning December 27, 2010,“ said the Kenya Wildlife Service Corporate Affairs Officer Paul Udoto in a statement.
A seven-year-old boy and a man who were on the same flight were released after initial investigations failed to link them to the illegal cargo.
The arrest follows another one of a Singaporean national two weeks ago travelling from Lilongwe, Malawi through Nairobi to the same destination.
Mr Udoto said KWS has deployed sniffer dogs at the airports on a full-time basis to check on illegal trafficking in wildlife trophies at points of entry and exit into Kenya.
Various law enforcement agencies, including the Kenya Police, Kenya Wildlife Service, Customs as well as international ones like the Lusaka Agreement Task Force and Interpol are also working closely to ensure that no illegal wildlife trafficking occurs within the country and at its exit and entry points.
Recent trends show that most of the illegal wildlife trophy traffickers hide their goods in passenger baggage, cargo containers, on their bodies, false compartments on vehicles and commercial shipments.
Others provide incorrect information on customs documents, including the forging of signatures of export authorised officers. Others use courier services or as unaccompanied luggage.
Last year, KWS security units were involved in 21 confrontations with armed poachers. In these operations, 14 poachers were eliminated and eight others injured. At least three KWS rangers were injured.
A total of 13 firearms and 302 rounds of ammunition targeted at wildlife were recovered. A total of 178 elephants died through poaching in 2010 compared to 204 in 2009 showing a decline of 14.6 per cent in elephant mortality.
A total of 759 pieces of ivory weighing 2819.98 kg were recovered in 2010.
Traffickers arrested this year are from Britain, China, Democratic Republic of Congo, Korea, Singapore, Tanzania and Thailand.
To address these challenges, KWS is engaging in massive force modernisation, strengthening of investigations, enhancing policing of exit and entry points especially airports, seaports and other border points.
Kenya is also aggressively implementing international conventions as well as enhancing local, regional and international cooperation in order to disrupt the organised criminal syndicate networks.
Meanwhile, tourists will pay more to visit the five Kenya’s most popular national parks from the New Year.
This follows the publication of new rates by Forestry and Wildlife Minister Dr Noah Wekesa in a Gazette Notice No. 207 of December 24, 2010 effective from January 1, 2011.
Premium national parks include Lake Nakuru and Amboseli whose fees for foreigners moved from $60 (Sh4,800) to $75 (Sh6,000) while wilderness parks of Tsavo East, Tsavo West, and Meru rose from $50 (Sh4,000) to $60 (Sh4,800).
The local rates now apply across the five East Africa Community member states of Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi in line with the East African Community (EAC) Treaty.
Adult citizens of the five East Africa Community member states of Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi will pay Sh500 from Sh300 to enter Lake Nakuru and Amboseli while children and students will pay Sh200 from Sh100 in line with the provisions of the EAC Treaty.
The name of the charges meanwhile has been changed from park entry fees to conservation fees to reflect the fact that whenever visitors enter national parks, they are making a contribution to conservation and continued survival of wildlife and their habitats for generations to come.

Read more: http://www.capitalfm.co.ke/news/Kenyanews/Thai-woman-arrested-in-JKIA-ivory-bust-10982.html#ixzz19aAfK21b

Kenia: KWS on the spot as poachers target private ranches

Dozens of rhinos have been killed and their horns stolen by poachers targeting private sanctuaries. It is suspected they are working with rogue KWS rangers, writes JOB WERU

Three weeks ago, a contingent of Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) and paramilitary General Service Unit officers were deployed to the expansive Solio Ranch to track down suspected poachers.

The poachers had sneaked into the sanctuary at night and shot dead a black rhino and escaped with one of its horns, before KWS officers caught up with them and killed one of them. The officers at the same time recovered an AK-47 rifle loaded with 30 bullets, two axes, a mobile phone and Sh39,651 from the felled poacher who was identified as Mohammed Ali Ibrahim from Tana River District.

Poaching history

A horn that had not been extracted from the 25-year-old rhino was also recovered.

A few months before, a suspected poacher was arrested with a G3 rifle in the ranch, which boasts the highest number of black rhinos, which international wildlife conservation agencies and conservationists have declared endangered. The attack came barely months after another poacher was arrested in the sanctuary while armed with a G3 rifle and was suspected to have been hunting for rhinos.

According to information posted on KWS website, 12 black rhinos (two per cent of Kenya’s black rhino population) and six white rhinos (one and-a-half per cent) of Kenya southern white rhinos were killed by poachers last year.

All the rhino poaching incidents were recorded in private ranches in Laikipia County where a total of 13 rhinos were poached. Mugie Ranch in Laikipia West District lost three, Laikipia Nature Conservancy three, Solio Ranch five while Ol Pejeta and Lewa Conservancy lost one each. But various stakeholders in the sector have raised a red alert over what they claim is KWS involvement in the illegal trade and its complacency in eradicating the vice.

Unconfirmed reports also indicate that some provincial administrators and some General Service Unit officers who have a camp in Solio Ranch may also be involved in the syndicate. KWS is the sole custodian of ivory and horns. One has to acquire a licence to hold any wildlife trophy.

Since 1989 when former President Daniel Arap Moi torched a bulk of elephant tusks, KWS has been accumulating tonnes of rhino and elephant tusks, all of which are kept in its “well-guarded’ strong rooms.

KWS Communications Manager Paul Udoto says when a tusk or horn is recovered from any region, they are temporarily kept in those regions before being transported to Nairobi under tight security. "We have not disposed of any horns, tusks or wildlife trophy since 1989. They are Government property and we cannot sell them since this would indirectly encourage poaching," says Udoto.

Strongrooms’ theft

Surprisingly, several rhino horns worth millions of shillings have mysteriously disappeared from various KWS strong rooms around the country in recent years. The thefts have been recorded in Meru National Park, Nanyuki’s KWS offices and KWS headquarters in Nairobi.

In Nanyuki, a Government pistol was also stolen.

In all the thefts, the strong rooms where the ivory was kept were reportedly opened, since no breakage was reported.

An officer, attached to the KWS headquarters and who sought anonymity, said nobody was charged in court over the Nanyuki incident where a rhino horn and a firearm were stolen.

In the Nanyuki’s case, an officer was arrested but later released after it was claimed he had given false information concerning the incident.

"No serious investigation is carried out despite the intensity of the crime and the magnitude of the value of the trophies. We squarely blame our senior officers over the incidents," said the officer.

The events surrounding incidents of rhino killings have, however, raised concerns over the seriousness of the agency in protecting the rhino. Udoto and the Mountain region Assistant Director at KWS Mr Robert Njue claim there was a scheme to malign KWS director, Dr Julius Kipngetich’s name ahead of the expected expiry of his term.

"We are heading to a transition and these appear like transition tricks that are taking course," Udoto says.

However, conservationists claim the organisation was somehow overwhelmed and was to blame over the deaths of rhinos. Concerning the theft in KWS strong rooms, Udoto, without giving specific details, claimed that some KWS officers were interdicted and others taken to court.

"These crimes occurred years ago and some officers who were implicated are no longer in service. We believe some machineries are reviving the issues to taint the image of our director," Udoto told CCI by phone.

In Kieni Constituency, which neighbours Solio Ranch, a resident who asked not to be named, claimed it was suspected that officers from KWS, GSU and some provincial administrators were involved.

Mr Edward Parfet, the proprietor of Solio Ranch called for an independent probe into the massive killing of rhinos in his conservancy, saying it appeared KWS was to blame. "KWS is solely to blame for the killings and something should be done about it," he told CCI by phone.

Parfet accused KWS of an underground scheme to kill rhinos in the sanctuary and sell rhino horns saying they are conversant with the terrain of the ranch. Solio Ranch has been marked as the best breeding ground for rhinos due to its ecological features that befit the beasts.

Also termed a good ground for rhino breeding is the nearby Ol’Pejeta conservancy. Njue trashed claims of KWS involvement as unfounded and out to malign the organisation and its exemplary performance in wildlife conservation and management. "The KWS rangers are professionally trained and they have their country at heart. These remarks are aimed at maligning the organisation and they are out to demoralise our officers who spend nights in the bush while in their noble duty of guarding Kenya’s heritage," he said.

Tough laws

For the last two years, poachers have increasingly attacked various sanctuaries within the country and the insurgence has left KWS and other conservationists worried.

Ms Kuki Gallmann, a leading conservationist, author and proprietor of Laikipia Nature Conservancy describes the attacks as a tragedy that deserves more attention in the media. She advocates for establishment of harsh laws against poaching.

"What is going on in the Kenyan bush is a tragedy of enormous proportion which should get more attention headlines in the media and in Parliament as our country is losing irreplaceable and priceless inheritance. It is a true holocaust," says Gallmann.

Last year, Gallmann’s ranch fell victim to the attacks. "We lost 62 elephants and three black rhinos. This escalated from 2007 when we lost six elephants and in 2008 when 28 elephants and one rhino were poached."

The conservationist attributes increased cases of poaching to increased prices of wildlife trophies and high demand.

Mr Njue, attributes the increased attacks in Kenya to the instability in the neighbouring Somalia. However, the trend is overwhelmingly worrying internationally, although African countries with huge herds of black rhinos seem easy targets.

"South Africa and Zimbabwe have similarly been affected by this rampant global rhino poaching. In 2009, the two nations lost more than 250 rhinos and the trend is escalating," says Njue.

The illegal trade is fuelled by Asian demand for rhinoceros horns and a temporary lift on wildlife trophy ban that was granted to some African countries. "Illegal dealers took the advantage to prey on rhinos and they have been using Kenyans, and especially the poor youth, to engage in the dangerous trade," says Njue.

"The instability in Somalia is escalating poaching in Kenya, since the country is being used as a conduit for trophies," he adds.
He says Somalia dealers are believed to be using Kenyans to kill black rhinos in conservancies.

"We have upped surveillance systems, and are able to detect anybody who trespasses into the sanctuary, prompting action from our rangers," says Njue.

Source:www.standardmedia.co.ke/InsidePage.php?id=2000025189&cid=259&story=KWS on the spot as poachers target private ranches

Kenia: Thai suspect arrested with illegal ivory at JKIA

A suspect from Thailand was Friday night arrested with 19.5 kg of illegal ivory at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport.

 

 

Police intercepted her on routine patrol while

 

 

She was checking into a Kenya Airways flight at 11.30pm with 105 pieces of ivory bangles, necklaces and raw ivory while on transit from Maputo, Mozambique, to Bangkok, Thailand.

In a statement, KWS Corporate Communications Manager Paul Udoto says the suspect will be arraigned at the Makadara Law Courts in Nairobi on Monday.

The arrest follows another one of a Singaporean two weeks ago travelling from Lilongwe, Malawi through Nairobi to the same destination.

Udoto says KWS has deployed sniffer dogs at the airports in the country on a full-time basis to check on illegal trafficking in wildlife trophies at points of entry and exit.

Meanwhile, the government has increased rates for those touring the country’s five most popular national parks.

The publication of the new rates by Forestry and Wildlife minister Dr Noah Wekesa will be effective from next Sunday, the new year.

Udoto says the rates for foreign tourists visiting Lake Nakuru and Amboseli national parks has been adjusted upwards by 15 dollars to 75 dollars while rates for those touring Tsavo East, Tsavo West, and Meru national parks has been increased from 50 dollars to 60 dollars.

Udoto says rates for adult citizens of the five East Africa Community member states has also been increased by 200 shillings to 500 shillings for those visiting Lake Nakuru and Amboseli national parks while children and students will pay 200 shillings from the current 100 shillings.

Written By:Wabomba Stanley,    Posted: Sun, Dec 26, 2010

Source: www.kbc.co.ke/news.asp?nid=68168

Newsletter aus Kenia/Die Waisen im November

Monatsbericht für die Nursery-Gruppe:

Für die Nursery-Elefanten war der November ein ziemlich aufregender Monat. Suguta, Melia und Tumaren mussten üben, über die Rampe auf und von dem Lkw zu steigen, der sie Anfang Dezember nach Ithumba bringen wird. Am 17. November erhielt unsere Nursery-Gruppe erneut Zuwachs durch die kleine Ishanga aus dem Nationalpark Tsavo-West. Gerade noch rechtzeitig hatte man sie buchstäblich aus den Fängen der Löwen retten können. Die Patrouille, die sich um das Aufspüren und Einsammeln von Schlingfallen kümmert (das so genannte De-Snaring Team), bemerkte, in welcher Notlage sich das Elefantenbaby befand und umzingelte das Rudel. Einer der Ranger feuerte zwei Luftschüsse ab, so dass die Löwen die Flucht ergriffen und der kleine Dickhäuter gerettet werden konnte. Bei seiner Ankunft in der Nursery war das kleine Kalb schwer traumatisiert, abgemagert und verwundet.

Ishanga IMG_0379 (109)

„Newsletter aus Kenia/Die Waisen im November“ weiterlesen