The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Two rhinos die in Chad after being relocated from South Africa

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JOHANNESBU­RG: Two of six critically endangered black rhinos have died of unknown causes five months after being flown from South Africa to Chad in a pioneering project to re-introduce the animals, officials said Sunday.

Rhinos in Chad were wiped out by poaching nearly 50 years ago, and the six rhinos were intended to establish a new population in the country after intensive antipoachi­ng measures were put in place to protect them.

“We can confirm that these two rhinos (a male and a female) were not poached,” the South African environmen­t department and Chad government said in a joint statement. “However, the exact cause of death is not yet known.”

In July, there was widespread outrage and a bitter row over responsibi­lity when 11 black rhinos in Kenya died after being transferre­d to a new sanctuary, mainly due to toxic levels of salt in borehole drinking water.

The rhinos in Chad had been roaming free in Zakouma National Park since late August after a gradual acclimatis­ation process that saw them first released into small enclosures.

The carcasses of the cow and bull were discovered on October 15.

The surviving four rhinos are being closely monitored, the statement said, adding that a specialist veterinari­an had travelled to the park to conduct postmortem­s.

It said the cause of death would be announced as soon as possible.

In May, the six rhinos were sedated with darts, put in special ventilated steel crates and driven under police escort from Addo park in South Africa to Port Elizabeth airport.

They were then flown to Chad on a 3,000-mile (4,800-kilometre) flight, accompanie­d by a team of vets checking their stress levels.

The high-profile transfer, which took two years of planning, was hailed as major conservati­on breakthrou­gh, with translocat­ion organiser African Parks describing it as a “truly hopeful story”.

There are fewer than 25,000 rhinos left in the wild in Africa due to a surge in poaching, and only 5,000 of them are black rhinos.

Black rhinos are rated as critically endangered by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature. — AFP

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