The Citizen (Gauteng)

TOYS FOR BOYS Glimmer of hope for ‘poaching gang’

RHINO HORN: CONCOURT ALLOWS LOCAL TRADE

- Ilse de Lange – ilsedl@citizen.co.za

Charges against ‘syndicate’ have to be amended in light of latest ruling.

AConstitut­ional Court ruling confirming the lifting of South Africa’s moratorium on domestic trade in rhino horn has resulted in the state having to drop several charges against members of an alleged rhino poaching syndicate.

The High Court in Pretoria was on Thursday informed that the effect of the Constituti­onal Court ruling was that the charge sheet against Polokwane game farmer Dawie Groenewald, his wife, Sariette, and eight co-accused had to be amended.

The amended charge sheet has not yet been handed to the accused and their legal representa­tives said they foresaw that there might be applicatio­ns for further particular­s.

Judge Eben Jordaan provisiona­lly postponed their trial to January 29 next year, pending the serving of a new charge sheet and negotiatio­ns between the state and defence.

The trial of one of the accused, veterinari­an Manie du Plessis, was postponed to July 17 to await the outcome of his representa­tions to the National Prosecutin­g Authority regarding a possible plea bargain.

The 10 accused were arrested in 2010 after a 15-month investigat­ion called Project Cruiser but their criminal trial was delayed on numerous occasions to await the final outcome of a legal battle about the validity of the 2009 moratorium.

Groenewald was allegedly the mastermind of one of South Africa’s largest rhino poaching syndicates.

A full bench of the High Court in Pretoria in 2015 set aside the moratorium, which meant that domestic trade in rhino horn in South Africa became legal, although the internatio­nal ban on such trade remained in place.

The court ruled that government had failed to meet even the minimum requiremen­ts of a public consultati­ve and participat­ory process. It said the level of rhino poaching since the moratorium came into effect was “quite alarming” and there was no evidence that it helped to stop internatio­nal smuggling.

The High Court, Supreme Court of Appeal and Constituti­onal Court subsequent­ly turned down the environmen­tal affairs minister’s applicatio­n for leave to appeal against the ruling.

Groenewald and his co-accused, which include two veterinary surgeons and a pilot, were allegedly linked to hundreds of illegal rhino poaching incidents over a four-year period.

They initially faced over 1 800 charges, including racketeeri­ng, money laundering, illegal hunting of rhino, dealing in rhino horn and contraveni­ng the Biodiversi­ty and Prevention of Organised Crime Acts.

 ?? Picture: Yeshiel Panchia ?? Uzae Chellan poses for a photo in front of one of the cars at the Forest Hill Youth Day Motor Show in Joburg yesterday.
Picture: Yeshiel Panchia Uzae Chellan poses for a photo in front of one of the cars at the Forest Hill Youth Day Motor Show in Joburg yesterday.

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