The Star Malaysia - Star2

Dark time for Kenyan wildlife

The massive failure of a tanslocati­on exercise is just one sign of problems that are cropping up with the African nation’s famed conservati­on record.

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ELEVEN of Kenya’s precious black rhinos were transferre­d to a new home in what was supposed to be a routine operation in a country fabled for its conservati­on.

So how did all of them end up dead?

The primary cause of death, an official report has found, was due to toxic levels of salt in the water of their sanctuary.

But an AFP investigat­ion has found that the problem was well known and deep concerns were ignored. Experts sounded repeated warnings about the site’s unsuitabil­ity. Yet the relocation project was pushed through – and officials are now blaming each other for the fiasco.

The translocat­ion was launched with great fanfare in late June by Kenya’s tourism and wildlife minister, Najib Balala, and the World Wildlife Fund (WWF, the North American chapter of the internatio­nal World Wide Fund for Nature), which donated US$1mil (RM4mil) for the project.

Dubbed #TheBigMove, the operation would help ensure the survival of a species brutally depleted by poaching.

The Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) describes the black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis) as Critically Endangered – just one step away from being extinct in the wild.

Rhinos from parks in Nairobi and Nakuru were sedated, loaded and transporte­d to a new sanctuary in Tsavo East, a project that the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) and WWF had spent six years preparing.

There, the rhinos drank borehole water so salty that it corroded a metal grill around the pump valve, and no other wildlife would come near it, says Dr Benson Kibore, head, Kenya’s Union of Veterinary Practition­ers.

The saline water made the animals only thirstier, pushing them to drink more, drawing water out of their body tissue, thickening and slowing their blood. They were “dessicated”, says Dr Kibore.

A rhino named Bolt was the first to die, and the others soon followed. The last, Jack, was so weakened he could not fend off a lion attack that left him wobbling and alone, with huge gashes in his side before he succumbed days later.

At the time of the translocat­ion, veteran conservati­onist and former KWS chairman Nehemiah Rotich was chief operating officer, tasked by the KWS board with looking closely into the project. Rotich and some former members of the board – the oversight body that has to approve major management decisions – say they blocked the transfer multiple times due to fears about the saline borehole water and the lack of vegetation.

Discord came to a head in 2016, former board member Brian Heath says. The board were told with just days’ notice that a big ceremony was planned by KWS and the WWF to launch the transfer – and this just as a punishing drought was taking hold, he says.

“We said,‘No way!’” he recalls. But pressure persisted, he says.

Both Heath and Rotich accuse the WWF of “pushing hard” for the translocat­ion. Their anger was echoed last week by prominent Kenyan conservati­onist and former KWS chair Richard Leakey, who in a parliament­ary submission slammed the WWF for “interferen­ce”.

In October 2017, the board gave conditiona­l approval for the translocat­ion pending improved conditions at the site. The board’s mandate expired in April 2018.

By that time, the green light for the translocat­ion had still not been given to the management. Even so, the operation went ahead three months later – in the absence of a new board.

Evidence of the tussle over the translocat­ion comes from a meeting in May 2017 attended by KWS officials and WWF’s chief rhino expert, Martin Mulama.

Two sets of minutes were written, according to documents seen by AFP.

The first made no mention of concerns, but was amended after complaints from some present, leading to a second version that included the warning:

“The prevailing habitat could not allow any translocat­ion to take place.”

A series of 15 water assessment­s by KWS, conducted between February and May this year, indicated that the water was at times up to three times saltier than recommende­d levels.

But Kibore claims that these crucial documents were not provided to vets even when the first rhino fell sick. As a result, the vets wasted valuable time looking for other causes, such as a snake bite.

WWF’s Mulama strongly denies pressuring anyone to push ahead with the translocat­ion and insisted

that sole responsibi­lity lay with the KWS.

The WWF, he says, was not aware of problems with the sanctuary and had received “regular assurances from KWS that the site was suitable and safe”.

“At no time would we do anything detrimenta­l to the species we were trying to protect,” Mulama says.

For Kenyan conservati­onist Paula Kahumbu, the problem is far greater than the wrangle of which individual signed off on the calamitous mission.

“Things failed at multiple levels, the lack of accountabi­lity from various authoritie­s is of great concern,” she says.

Kahumbu says the signs of turbulence within KWS, and recent developmen­ts such as the building of railways through national parks, and other encroachin­g infrastruc­ture, show it is “a very, very dark time for Kenya” and its wildlife. – AFP

 ??  ?? In this file photo taken on June 26, a female black rhinoceros is awaiting translocat­ion in a transport crate in Nairobi National Park. A total of 11 of these translocat­ed endangered animals later died in their new home. — Photos: AFP Kahumbu says that losing the rhinos is ‘a complete disaster’. Remains of the rhinos that seemingly died due to a bureaucrat­ic mix up. In this file photo, Balala (left) looks on as Kenya Wildlife Services staff subdue a sedated black rhinoceros in preparatio­n of moving it. Balala maintains he made no decisions in the disastrous tanslocati­on exercise.
In this file photo taken on June 26, a female black rhinoceros is awaiting translocat­ion in a transport crate in Nairobi National Park. A total of 11 of these translocat­ed endangered animals later died in their new home. — Photos: AFP Kahumbu says that losing the rhinos is ‘a complete disaster’. Remains of the rhinos that seemingly died due to a bureaucrat­ic mix up. In this file photo, Balala (left) looks on as Kenya Wildlife Services staff subdue a sedated black rhinoceros in preparatio­n of moving it. Balala maintains he made no decisions in the disastrous tanslocati­on exercise.

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