Daily Mirror

Elephants’ last poachers.. the D

- BY RHIAN LUBIN In Zambia Pictures: ROWAN GRIFFITHS

The elephant has been shot and is slumped on its knees, ears still intact but a gaping hole where its face was after poachers hacked it away with a chainsaw to remove its ivory.

The remains of two more elephants were found nearby, blood still pouring from where they had been blasted.

And the majestic animals were killed in Zambia’s South Luangwa National Park – where they should be free to roam safely.

A wildlife investigat­or on a routine patrol stumbled across the harrowing sight, which is sadly all too familiar to him.

“On a daily basis, we are losing prestigiou­s God-given wildlife to poachers,” says the officer who took the upsetting images.

“The park loses wildlife species nearly every day because of poaching. They want the ivory, leaving the body to waste away.

“Whenever I look at these images, I feel so sad. I love and value wildlife.”

He remains anonymous to protect himself and his family, like many wildlife wardens and investigat­ors.

Figures this week showed elephant poaching across Africa is down to 4% of the population from 10%. But overall numbers are still falling

Many wardens risk their lives by going undercover to snare poachers but there is often not enough evidence to nail them.

So teams from the UK are now training investigat­ors in wildlife forensics to help boost conviction­s. We joined TRACE Wildlife Forensics Network, Traffic and their partners at the Netherland­s Forensic Institute to see how they are helping.

“Tackling the illegal wildlife trade is an immediate need. We’re losing biodiversi­ty on a timescale shorter than climate change,” says Dr Rob Ogden, programme director at TRACE Wildlife Forensics Network and head of conservati­on genetics at Edinburgh University.

He is leading the course on the park’s outskirts and adds: “Wildlife forensics is delivering the evidence to prosecute criminals but it must be available more widely and used more effectivel­y.”

In two weeks, 24 senior investigat­ors from the Department­s of National Parks and Wildlife in Zambia and Malawi, plus lab staff from the Victoria Falls Wildlife Trust in Zimbabwe, learn how to take and preserve evidence.

Dr Ogden, 43, says: “The forensics we do is different to traditiona­l human forensics. Usually, with human crime, we know a crime has been committed because somebody’s reported it, or somebody’s dead. We try to reconstruc­t what happened.

“In wildlife forensics, you often know who’s involved as you’ll intercept somebody carrying something or someone selling something they shouldn’t be. But you need to prove whether a crime has been committed. So we use the analysis of wildlife evidence.

“We use scientific analysis because we can’t always identify things visually. To prove a crime has been committed, we need evidence to suggest

COURSE LEADER Dr Ogden Our Rhian visits a mock crime scene FIELDWORK Wardens learn vital new skills

Elephant has had its face cut away

whether it was a protected species or not.” During the course, funded by People’s Postcode Lottery, the European Commission and USAID, Dr Ogden and his team mock up crime scenes. The investigat­ors are taught how DNA can be obtained from almost any biological sample and it is hoped the training will help them link evidence found at poaching scenes and that collected when suspects are caught or trophies are discovered. Dr Ogden says: “The sample types with the most DNA, blood and tissue, also

degrade quickest, so they are not always useful. Samples such as ivory or bone are harder to analyse but store DNA for years. Samples are sent to the lab for genetic analysis, starting with DNA extraction.”

As they examine the fake crime scenes, one investigat­or tells me what he is up against. He says: “One night we heard a gunshot. It was total darkness and we couldn’t arrest them. They ran. At around 5am we found an elephant had died.

“Those guys had tried to take the tusks off, they didn’t manage to. But the elephant was dead. There was nothing we could have done. What was the point? The elephant died for nothing.”

Poachers kill around 20,000 African elephants a year and there was a surge of 9,000% in rhino poaching in South Africa between 2007 and 2014. The global illegal wildlife trade is worth an estimated £15billion annually.

This month, the presidents of Botswana, Zimbabwe, Zambia and Namibia called CHARLES MABETHI ON WHY DNA COURSE IS VITAL for an end to a 30-year ban imposed by the Conventio tional Trade in Endangered

And this week Botswana world’s largest elephant p 130,000 – said it would l PROSECUTOR Charles Mabethi tells Rhian of challenge

We have no way to prove they are lying. We don’t have the facilities

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