The Citizen (Gauteng)

Hawks nab two rhino poachers

MIDDLEMEN: ARREST ‘WILL BREAK KRUGER SUPPLY CHAIN’

- Amanda Watson amandaw@citizen.co.za

Four horns, valued at R1.5m, had been linked to suspects.

Intrigue surrounded the announceme­nt yesterday by the Directorat­e of Priority Crime Investigat­ion (The Hawks) of the arrest of two SA “middlemen” involved in the ongoing rhino poaching onslaught.

Mandla Mashele and Calvin Malapane were arrested on May 30 in Benoni for the procuremen­t of rhino horn.

Four rhino horns, valued at R1.5 million, had been linked to the two accused.

These arrests would disrupt the supply chain from the Kruger National Park to Gauteng and beyond, said Colonel Johan Jooste, Hawks’ endangered species unit commander.

Details of how the Hawks penetrated the syndicate remained a mystery to protect the officers involved, who were working undercover.

The arrests are more “lynchmen” than “kingpin” status, such as the alleged Groenewald gang accused of running one of SA’s largest rhino poaching syndicates, but remained important, given Mashele’s and Malepane’s alleged middlemen status.

But the initial operation to arrest the two went awry, thanks to extensive security and CCTV cameras at the accused’s palatial home in Daveyton, near Springs.

A source told The Citizen when the accused saw the Hawks roll up outside their home, they managed to escape. It was only after an intensive manhunt that they voluntaril­y handed themselves over, Jooste confirmed later.

Both accused are currently on bail of R50 000 each.

The arrests were welcomed by NGOs Save Our Rhino (SoR) and Outraged SA Citizens Against Poaching (Oscap).

“The question is, how much informatio­n are they going to get out of the accused,” said Loraine Liebenberg of SoR. “The significan­t thing is to break the links between Africa and Asia.”

Liebenberg said the National Prosecutin­g Authority also had to up its game over prosecutio­ns.

Oscap’s Kim da Ribeira said after the “song and dance” made yesterday, it was important to find out how involved the accused were.

“They are South African and from an area not normally associated with rhino poaching, so the more informatio­n the Hawks can garner the better,” Da Ribeira said.

The duo are back in court on July 13. –

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