Botswana Approves Hunting Packages to Shoot 27 Elephants

March 28 (Bloomberg) — Botswana sold hunting packages to shoot 27 elephants, the country’s Environment, Wildlife and Tourism Ministry said.

The elephants chosen are considered to be “problem animals“ and the auction is part of efforts to control the southern African nation’s 150,000 elephant population, the Gaborone-based ministry said in an e-mailed statement. The packages were sold for a total 5.6 million pula ($852,000).

To contact the reporter on this story: Jerry Bungu in Gaborone at [email protected]

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Gordon Bell at [email protected]

 

Source: www.businessweek.com/news/2011-03-28/botswana-approves-hunting-packages-to-shoot-27-elephants.html

Mozambique: Six Inspectors Suspended Over Illegal Timber and Ivory Exports

Maputo — The attempted illegal export of unprocessed timber and of ivory from the northern Mozambique port of Pemba, in January, has led to the suspension from duty of six inspectors working for the Cabo Delgado Provincial Forestry and Wildlife Services, reports Saturday’s issue of the Maputo daily „Noticias“.

The six inspectors witnessed the loading of the logs into 161 20 foot containers, and although they knew that the planned export was illegal, they did nothing to stop it. To make matters worse, when the containers were reopened, it was found that the amount of wood they contained was much greater than that which had been officially declared. „Mozambique: Six Inspectors Suspended Over Illegal Timber and Ivory Exports“ weiterlesen

Kenya: Alarm Raised Over Loss of Wild Animals

Nairobi — Wildlife conservancies in the Upper Eastern region have expressed concern over rampant poaching.

The private and community conservancies concentrated in Laikipia, Samburu and Isiolo called for stiffer penalties for those involved in the illegal trade in wildlife trophies if the war against poaching is to be won.

"The rate at which we are losing the elephant and rhino populations means that in the near future we might not have any of them left in Kenya," said Dr Antony King of the Laikipia Wildlife Forum.

He was addressing representatives of more than 300 conservancies from across the country during a meeting in Nyeri.

The agenda of the forum was to push for the passage of the Wildlife Bill, which they said would boost conservation efforts.

Participants were taken through shocking statistics showing how the country’s elephant and rhino populations had drastically reduced, mostly due to poaching, over a 70-year period.

The workshop heard that the elephant population in the conservancies had decreased from 160,000 to a mere 597 over the past 70 years while the number of the Eastern Black Rhino had plummeted to a paltry 300 from 20,000 over the same period.

Source: http://allafrica.com/stories/201103180072.html

African elephants victims of Thai trafficking

BANGKOK, Mar 21 – For many years Southeast Asia had a bountiful supply of elephants to satisfy Thailand’s ivory traffickers, but the decimation of the species has seen them turn to Africa for their plunder.
The more than 1,600 tusks seized since the beginning of 2009 by Thai customs indicate that more than 800 elephants were slaughtered to feed a murky and voracious international market.
"Thailand is still ranked number one" in the ivory traffic rankings, said Chris Shepherd, deputy manager for Southeast Asia at wildlife protection group Traffic.
International trade in ivory was banned in 1989, but seizures have risen dramatically in the past five years.
Experts say the trade is passing through organised networks often linked to the smuggling of rare animals from Mozambique, Tanzania or Kenya.
"When you order ivory for decoration, one elephant will be killed — the killer is demand," said Lieutenant Colonel Adtapon Sudsai, investigation chief at the Natural Resource and Environment Crime Suppression Department.
Some of the ivory imported — sometimes delivered without even being cleaned of the elephant’s blood — is destined for the Thai market.
Certain "businessmen or senior government officers" in the kingdom like to hang large mammals‘ tusks on their walls as a symbol of their power, notes Seri Thaijongrak, director of the Royal Thai Customs‘ investigation bureau.
Tourists also enjoy looking at the jewels and small animals carved by specialist craftsmen in northern Nakhon Sawan province, who worked traditionally with the ivory of Thailand’s native elephants.
Thailand’s ivory sculpting tradition started in the late 19th century when an estimated 100,000 elephants roamed the kingdom. Since then most have been lost to poachers and the clearing of their forest habitat.
Now just a few thousand remain — many of them working in the tourism industry — and the ivory traffickers have turned to the pachyderms‘ African cousins to meet considerable Asian demand.
Benefiting from its location, Thailand exports much of the ivory, rough or carved, to China — where it is traditionally used in medicinal powders — and Japan. But some also ends up in the United States and Europe.
Critics say the authorities need to take tougher action.
"We are not seeing significant prosecutions," said Justin Gosling, of Interpol’s environmental crimes department in the Asia-Pacific region.
"Seizures must be met with prosecutions, and not (just) prosecution of the transporters, poachers and consumers, but the key people controlling this trade," he added.
Experts are pessimistic about justice being done, with a lack of communication between Bangkok and relevant African authorities and inadequate training of the customs and police officers.
"Wildlife crime in these parts of the world still is not seen as a priority," said Shepherd.
When financial means exists, they are on the wrong side of the battle, experts say, with much remaining to be done against corruption.
"In order to smuggle these huge quantities, there need to be corrupt officials involved in this," insists Gosling.
The local press recently reported on the disappearance of ivory stocks in a customs warehouse, an incident that does not appear isolated.
But even the most optimistic admit that the fight is a difficult one.
The ivory confiscated by customs since 2009 is worth nearly 250 million baht (nearly six million euros), and such success means the traffickers "will probably change their tactic," said Gosling.
In anticipation of such a switch, customs officials — who recently made seizures at a Bangkok airport — have been reinforcing controls at ports, said Seri — but he warned it was hard to keep up.
"We are always one step behind them," he said. "Maybe many steps behind."

Read more: http://www.capitalfm.co.ke/news/Africa/African-elephants-victims-of-Thai-trafficking-12120.html#ixzz1HPG21EyS

Kenya – A mammoth task: Rangers sedate and fit GPS tracking devices on migrating elephants

A group of men haul an elephant up, back on to his feet, having tranquillised the beast before sending him, and seven chums, on their way again.

For the first time in 40 years the Kenya Wildlife Services undertook the project in Tsavo East National Park this week, as they want to track the elephants‘ migration routes.

Using GPS technology KSW collared the sedated elephants – who are eight of nearly 13,000 in the park – with the help of the Animal Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW), in the park 30km south-east of Nairobi.

Having marked the male and female beasts, the tracking devices will assist in the mapping out of migratory routes and corridors in the park and its buffer zones within the larger ecosystem.

Located in different parts of the park, which is a massive 13,747 square kilometres, the tagged elephants will be closely monitored for 20 months – as long as they retain the collars.

The collars themselves will enable the KWS to effectively design intervention measures for security operations and human-elephant conflict mitigation.

The last collaring in Tsavo East was done in 1972 using conventional collars that required manual tracking with radio transmitters.

IFAW President and CEO Fred O’Regan believes that the tracking is very important for elephant management and conservation.

He said: ‚The cost of losing elephants and other wildlife and their habitats is more costly than securing them.

‚IFAW recognises that Tsavo is a major lifeline for elephants and Kenya as a whole.

‚It is therefore vital for KWS and ourselves to know which migratory areas are most critical for elephant survival so as to secure those areas, as well as reduce conflict incidences with humans.‘

A recent aerial census conducted last month established 12,572 elephants, an increase from 11,696 in 2008.

The fluctuation of Tsavo’s elephant populations over the decades has had significant impacts on the ecology of the ecosystem.

In 1967, the ecosystem had some 35,000 elephants while about 5,400 individuals were left in 1988.

Heavy armed poaching and severe drought were responsible for this rapid decline. However since 1990s, concerted efforts by KWS and other conservation partners have seen elephant populations steadily increase to the current status.

Common challenges facing Tsavo’s management are poaching for ivory, human encroachment and habitat destruction, human-elephant conflict, livestock incursions into the Parks, and the adverse and emergent effects of climate change such as severe droughts.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1367292/Elephants-tracked-Kenya-Wildlife-Services-Go-Nelly-pack-truck.html#ixzz1GwlUlQq8