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How South Africa can lose the rhino poaching war

- JANINE AVERY

AS SOUTH Africa continues to lose rhinos in the poaching war, it seems that the government is failing those fighting it.

Although there has been some success in protecting rhinos in the Kruger National Park, rhino poaching middlemen and kingpins continue to operate with impunity in South Africa as the country fails to successful­ly prosecute those arrested for high level involvemen­t in rhino crimes.

The lifting of the 2009 moratorium on the domestic trade in rhino horn, owing to a failure in following correct public participat­ion procedures, not only sends confusing messages to rhino-horn-consuming nations, but raises alarm signals regarding the country’s control of the situation.

While Minister for Environmen­tal Affairs and Tourism, Edna Molewa, announced successful conviction rates of rhino poachers (88% in 2015 and 78% last year), this rate actually only takes into account

OPINION

the cases that went to trial and saw a verdict, painting an inaccurate picture of the true situation.

Doing the sums correctly shows that the conviction percentage actually stands at “a pitiful 15%” of those arrested.

Senior State advocate, Isabet Erwee, referring to the Skukuza Magistrate’s Court, has said that, “A total of 25 to 30 matters is on that court roll every Wednesday”, and that, “some days, we have more than 50 accused in the dock”.

“The frustratio­n is that there are NGOs which are working specifical­ly in terms of conservati­on and rhino issues, providing a lot of resources to actually do the work for them (prosecutor­s), up to the point where it literally just has to go to court,” says LiseMarie Greeff-Villet, communicat­ions co-ordinator at Peace Parks Foundation.

“They’ve been given everything, they’ve been given the investigat­ors… that’s one of the frustratio­ns.”

Internatio­nal NGO WildAid has released a new report citing repeated examples of case dismissals, postponeme­nts, witness intimidati­on, leniency, plea-bargains and paltry fines, with even repeat offenders walking free.

What is most alarming is that these offenders are often associated with the profession­al hunting, game farming and veterinary industries.

“I’m aware of cases now that are still open that have been going for at least 18 months to two years, where there is a clear documented evidence chain implicatin­g South Africans and no action has been taken,” says Peter Knights, chief executive officer of demand-reduction focused organisati­on WildAid.

The report also suggests that law enforcemen­t officials failed to detect exploitati­on of the trophy hunting loophole for three years, losing more than 200 white rhino trophies during this time.

And then just last year, a Vietnamese hunter was allowed to shoot a white rhino with an outfit that has been implicated in “thousands of criminal charges”.

“It’s about political will,” states Knights.

“For years, we have seen one South African elite after another evade justice, despite orchestrat­ing the killing of rhinos and the traffickin­g of their horns. The corruption, incompeten­ce and leniency in the system must not be allowed to continue. Organised crime is stopped by taking out the leaders, not just the foot soldiers,” he says.

Ross Purdon, of the DA, agrees: “Political will is everything. You’ve got the State Security Minister, (David) Mahlobo, implicated – he’s meant to be in charge of our safety and security – this is the government we are dealing with. That’s the fact.”

Mahlobo was implicated after an Al Jazeera report showed a Chinese national linked to rhino horn smuggling bragging on camera about his relationsh­ip with the minister, and despite the DA calling for an investigat­ion into the matter, no progress has been made.

“One of the other problems is this connection between the private sector and regulation­s,” says report author Susie Watts.

An article by Bryan Christy, published in National Geographic, illustrate­s her point. In this article, Dawie Groenewald, who has more than 1 700 rhino-related charges currently against him, actually tells the reporter that while other names were on the court cases to overturn the moratorium on the domestic trade in rhino horn trade, he was the one behind it.

According to the WildAid report, intelligen­ce generated from sophistica­ted investigat­ions implicatin­g South African police officers, as well as government officials from South Africa and Mozambique, has not been acted upon.

Despite repeated assurances from the government, South Africa has to date failed to sign an implementa­tion agreement based on the Memorandum of Understand­ing between the two countries, signed on April 17, 2014.

“The biggest problem right now is this lack of will to take out the big guys,” says Knights.

Speaking about a private investigat­ion company working in the Kruger National Park, Purdon reiterated this point: “When they started getting close to the high levels, their contract was terminated.”

Renowned writer and conservati­onist Ian McCallum says: “There are three things which we have to be very, very aware of. It’s a terrible triad of criminalit­y, financial opportunis­m and the amazing human indifferen­ce and defeatism in terms of conservati­on.”

Commenting on the failure to convict the middlemen and kingpins associated with rhino poaching, the words of environmen­tal attorney Cormac Cullinan, sum it up: “The idea of Africa without these magnificen­t creatures is appalling. Leaving the fate of rhinos in the hands of those who trade their body parts is tantamount to facilitati­ng genocide.

“The message must be unequivoca­l – killing rhinos and trading in horn is a crime, and those involved will be pursued to the ends of the Earth. Everyone has a duty to defend the rights of these ancient Africans to live wild – if we fail them, we fail humanity.” – Conservati­on Action Trust

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? A northern white rhino, one of only three of its kind left in the world, at Ol Pejeta conservanc­y, near the town of Nanyuki, Laikipia County, Kenya.
PICTURE: REUTERS A northern white rhino, one of only three of its kind left in the world, at Ol Pejeta conservanc­y, near the town of Nanyuki, Laikipia County, Kenya.

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