The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Africa poaching now a war, task force warns

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PRETORIA. — The fight against poaching must be treated as a war, Africa’s leading anti-poaching coalition said yesterday, as it called for the illicit wildlife trade to be monitored like global conflicts.

Enact, an EU-funded anti-poaching analytical taskforce that includes Interpol, called for the expansion of a media tracking system to track poaching incidents similar to establishe­d conflict monitoring methods.

“We’re following the model put out by conflict data programmes which have basically used media monitoring” on incidents of conflict, said Ciara Aucoin, a researcher at South Africa’s Institute for Security Studies.

“From that research we’ve been able to get a more nuanced understand­ing of conflicts around Africa,” she said while presenting the findings of Enact’s new study entitled “Guns, poison and horns”.

Those methods can be applied to anti-poaching efforts to spot trends and help law enforcemen­t tackle the trade, she said.

Enact unveiled the report at a summit of top anti-poaching experts in Pretoria just 24 hours ahead of internatio­nal rhino day which highlights the toll of the global horn trade.

Rhino horns are highly prized in Asia where they have been known to fetch up to $60,000 (50,200 euros) per kilo — more than gold or cocaine — with most of the demand coming from China and Vietnam, where it is coveted as a traditiona­l medicine and aphrodisia­c.

But expert researcher­s say the current black market rate in Vietnam is around $24 000 a kilo.

Africa’s rhinos could be extinct within 20 years at the rate they are being poached, according to Wildlife Direct, a non-profit conservati­on organisati­on.

Johan Jooste, head of special projects at South African National Parks, told AFP that the fight against poachers has become a war like any other.

“The rhino campaign in terms of armed conflict is as intense as any war,” he said.

“I’m a veteran of our Bush War and this is more intense than what we have seen there,” he said of South Africa’s brutal apartheid-era campaign against insurgents in its frontier regions between the 1960s and 1980s.

“The intensity has become high and it has become a very dangerous job. That is why in Africa we have to accept, against our will, that a ranger equals a warrior,” he said.

“That is why you have to adopt a paramilita­ry approach . . . I refer to this as the iron fist with a velvet glove.”

Jooste, who spoke at the summit, said that anti-poaching patrols in the park had engaged in armed confrontat­ion with poachers on 150 occasions. — AFP.

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