The Citizen (KZN)

TRADITIONA­L HEALERS JOIN THE RHINO CAUSE

FROM AIDING POACHERS TO ASSISTING IN STOPPING SCOURGE Kruger National Park benefiting from programme, with seven culprits having been arrested.

- Rorisang Kgosana rorisangk@citizen.co.za

Traditiona­l healers had to sometimes live in hiding for fear of angry rhino poachers, who threatened their lives after a failed poaching mission. Poachers often request strong magic potions from traditiona­l leaders to protect them from predators and law enforcemen­t officials during poaching raids.

Speaking at the Kruger National Park yesterday, Dr Sylvester Hlati, president of the SADC Unified Ancestors Traditiona­l Healers and Practition­ers of South Africa, said traditiona­l healers often provided this service to poachers as a way of making money.

But after initiating a campaign with the park to raise awareness about the negative role traditiona­l healers played in the rhino crisis, Hlati said seven poachers had been arrested.

He said the programme, which was launched in 2012, was a collaborat­ion between himself and the Kruger National Park to educate traditiona­l healers in Mpumalanga, Limpopo and Mozambique.

He approached the park when he noticed that poachers were often found in possession of muti.

“Traditiona­l healers have muti to stop a lion from biting or, if a poacher is arrested, to delay prosecutio­n by making sure the magistrate gets sick. As a leader, I had to intervene. We, as traditiona­l healers, are not prepared to work with criminals,” he said.

His plea, however, was not well received by all traditiona­l healers, many of whom failed to understand the impact of their services.

Hlati said healers rejected the campaign as they needed the money from poachers.

“But they realised that it was wrong. What started to happen was, once a poacher got muti and their accomplice­s were killed or arrested, the poachers would threaten to harm the healer for giving them muti that didn’t work. Healers would often run away from home out of fear of being killed.

“We can protect this park by using these powerful muti to protect the animals instead of poachers,” he said.

South African National Parks spokespers­on Ike Phaahla welcomed the initiative as a starting point for addressing poaching from within the community.

“It is a good initiative in the sense that a lot of problems within the park should be solved from outside.

“If healers can stop making people believe they are invincible and can succeed when getting in

We can protect this park by using muti.

the park, the less poachers we will see.”

Despite efforts to combat the killing of rhino, the carcass of a white rhino with no horn was discovered this week.

Rangers and police were at the scene yesterday, where scores of vultures were seen circling above the carcass. –

 ?? Picture: Jacques Nelles Picture: Jacques Nelles ?? HELPING OUT. Sylvester Hlati, a traditiona­l healer, speaks to media at the Kruger National Park about the benefits of government funding and aid for traditiona­l healers. SAD. An orphaned rhino in a sanctuary at the Kruger National Park.
Picture: Jacques Nelles Picture: Jacques Nelles HELPING OUT. Sylvester Hlati, a traditiona­l healer, speaks to media at the Kruger National Park about the benefits of government funding and aid for traditiona­l healers. SAD. An orphaned rhino in a sanctuary at the Kruger National Park.

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