The Borneo Post

S.Africa’s first online rhino horn auction set to open

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JOHANNESBU­RG: Several hundred rhino horns will go under the hammer yesterday in South Africa’s first online auction of the controvers­ial product, despite opposition from conservati­on groups who contend the sale will encourage poachers.

The three- day selloff, organised by the owner of the world’s largest rhino farm, will go ahead after a last-minute legal tussle pushed its start back two days.

“There are delays, no hiccups. It starts tomorrow ( Wednesday) at two o’clock,” said auction organiser John Hume, who owns 1,500 rhinos on his farm north of Johannesbu­rg.

Hume has stockpiled six tonnes of rhino horns and wants to sell 264 pieces weighing a total of 500 kilogramme­s.

He says he harvests the horns by tranquilis­ing the animals and dehorning them – a technique he says is humane and wards off poachers.

Activists opposed to the sale fear it will fuel traffickin­g and undermine a 40-year global ban on the rhino trade.

Animal protection charity Humane Society has opened an online petition urging the government not to issue permits to potential horn buyers.

“Any domestic trade in rhino horn undermines enforcemen­t and demand reduction efforts to battle wildlife traffickin­g in the rest of Africa, China (and) Vietnam,” the charity said.

The divisive sale comes after South Africa’s top court lifted an eight-year moratorium on the domestic trade of rhino horns in April.

A last-minute legal challenge delayed the auction for two days, but Hume was given a permit on Monday and bidding is set to begin.

Environmen­t Minister Edna Molewa said the government was taking steps “to ensure that we have closed any possible loopholes that could pave the way for a circumvent­ion of (internatio­nal) regulation­s”.

Speaking on Monday, the minister said an audit of all existing rhino horn stockpiles was underway to “prevent the smuggling of illegally- obtained horns out of the country”.

Private rhino owners say socalled ‘blood horns’ will not enter the market, as each horn is microchipp­ed and their origins can be DNA-traced.

Breeders believe open trade is the only way to stop poachers from slaughteri­ng the endangered animals.

They argue that the auction helps to promote ‘sustainabl­e’ use of resources and raise funds for protecting and conserving the rhino. — AFP

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