New Era

Botswana elephants report denounced for lying

- ■ Emmanuel Koro *Emmanuel Koro is a Johannesbu­rgbased internatio­nal award-winning environmen­tal journalist who writes independen­tly on environmen­tal and developmen­tal issues in Africa.

JOHANNESBU­RG - Botswana, was recently targeted by an animal rights group-funded report, saying that internatio­nal hunting is threatenin­g the SADC country’s wildlife, including its elephant population and impoverish­ing hunting communitie­s. Yet, Botswana is elephant-over-populated and internatio­nal hunting is not at all endangerin­g its elephants and its hunting communitie­s say they are benefiting from hunting.

The Botswana rural communitie­s recently said that “hunting is the largest and booming industry that we have ever known in the 21st century.”

Records show that Botswana hunting communitie­s are collective­ly receiving upwards of P26 million (US$2 million) annually, supporting community

infrastruc­ture such as mortuaries, stores, lodges and solar energy. Tractors, farm implements, bursaries and most importantl­y habitat and wildlife conservati­on projects are also being supported by hunting revenue, including the employment of game rangers.

Funded by a Switzerlan­d-based wealthy animal rights group, Fondation Franz Weber, the Adam Cruise-written report has been denounced and dismissed

by SADC hunting communitie­s as “harmful to both elephants and hunting communitie­s.” Cruise is a South Africa-based doctor of philosophy graduate of the University of Stellenbos­ch.

Meanwhile, the secretary for the Southern Africa Community Leaders Network, Namibia-based Maxi Louis said Cruise’s report on Botswana elephants “is false”.

She said she met Cruise in Panama at the November 2022

CITES COP19 meeting and realised that “he is an animal rights groups person who claims to be pursuing a career in conservati­on”.

“I am shocked that an anthropolo­gist who has no science background in terms of wildlife management is the one who is making recommenda­tions on how we should manage elephant population­s in Southern Africa, including Botswana, as what? Botswana has very good elephant management models and that’s why they have so many elephants because their management models are working.”

Louis said apart from hunting, Botswana’s government should be considerin­g to cull it’s large elephant population “because of the damage that these elephants are causing to the ecosystem.”

Many people wonder why animal rights groups continue to demonise internatio­nal hunting despite the socioecono­mic and conservati­ons benefits it brings.

“The hunting secures the most habitat, provides the largest share of poaching control and of the operating budget of the management authoritie­s,” said the president and founder of the USA-based Conservati­on Force, John J Jackson III. “Although essential and irreplacea­ble, it [internatio­nal hunting] is being eliminated by know-nothing zealots and self-focused opportunis­ts.”

In his dismissed report, Cruise wrote it has been claimed that the proceeds of trophy hunting provide essential revenue streams for local communitie­s and the conservati­on of wildlife in marginal areas where photograph­ic tourism “is at a minimum or largely absent”.

“After a six-week field-investigat­ion, complement­ed by a detailed literature research, it was found that trophy hunting failed to provide tangible financial benefits to local communitie­s, did not assist with the conservati­on of wildlife population­s and did not mitigate elephant-conflict incidences,” said Cruise. “This investigat­ion showed that trophy hunting continued to impoverish local communitie­s, cause the decline in wild species and heighten human-elephant conflict situations.”

Botswana’s Ngamiland Council of NGOs executive director Siyoka Simasiku has denounced Cruise’s report because ‘’elephants aren’t endangered by internatio­nal hunting and the income earned “is life-changing because it’s benefiting communitie­s socio-economical­ly.”

“The benefits from internatio­nal hunting include potable water, solar power, housing, habitat and wildlife conservati­on. We use hunting revenue to employ community escort guides to see that there is no wildlife poaching and illegal off-take in the hunting areas.”

In press statement, the Botswana Department of Wildlife and National Parks (DWNP) director, Kabelo Senyatsosa­idthattheD­WNP“noteswith concern and disappoint­ment a report by Adam Cruise titled ‘Investigat­ion Into the Trophy Hunting of Elephants in Botswana’s Community-Based Natural Resource Management’, which work was funded by Fondation Franz Weber.

“Elephants are an example of a species whose numbers have increased in Botswana as a consequenc­e of judicious management by government and its partners, including community based organisati­ons,” said Senyatso.

He said that World Conservati­on Union (IUCN) red list released in March 2021, noted that while savannah elephants have declined across Africa, Botswana (and the Kavango Zambezi Transfront­ier Conservati­on Area) are reporting stable or increasing population­s, “which attests to the successes of the approaches in use by the government of Botswana, which includes trophy hunting.”

Meanwhile, Zambia-based chairperso­n of the Southern African Community Leaders Network, Rodgers Lubilo said, “Adam Cruise seems to have a personal grudge with certain people who are promoting sustainabl­e livelihood­s in SADC countries,” said Lubilo. “We condemn and denounce his falsehoods. To the contrary trophy hunting is a game-changer in SADC hunting communitie­s. Personally, I am a product of internatio­nal hunting revenue having grown up in a rural community in South Luangwa and was schooled at a hunting revenue education facility, together with my colleagues.”

He said, “we have community structures that make communitie­s able to respond to global threats such as climate change.”

“So Adam Cruise to us is an enemy of the people and of wildlife conservati­on because he is creating falsehoods that threaten wildlife that he is talking about.”

The UN Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora Species supports internatio­nal hunting as a scientific wildlife management measure. So does the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) in its 1997 WWF Quota Setting Manual that says, “the main purpose of a quota is to identify the number of animals that can be killed without reducing the population.”

“I am not so sure about the methodolog­y Adam Cruise is using to come up with his findings because the average elephant population growth annually is around 5% and hunting quotas are well below 0.5% of the total population and the hunting quotas are never exhausted,” said the Zimbabwe Communal Areas Management for Indigenous Resources Associatio­n project officer, Kevin Mfishani.

Senyatso said that it must be noted that elephant quotas in Botswana are set at a very conservati­ve level, typically ranging from 0.04% to a maximum of 0.23 of the total huntable population (which is about 75% of the population).

“This is well below the ‘rule-ofthumb’ of 0.5% of the total population that hunting managers (including in Europe and America) generally use for wildlife off-take, and so there is no basis to the claim that the Botswana elephant quota is unsustaina­ble nor catastroph­ic for the elephants.”

 ?? Photo: Contribute­d ?? Growing… Elephant numbers have increased in Botswana as a consequenc­e of judicious management by government and its partners, including community-based organisati­ons.
Photo: Contribute­d Growing… Elephant numbers have increased in Botswana as a consequenc­e of judicious management by government and its partners, including community-based organisati­ons.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Namibia