Daily Dispatch

Poaching arrests soar

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POACHING-RELATED arrests climbed from 165 in 2010 to 267 in 2012, the government announced this week as authoritie­s launch intercampa­igns to slow the killings.

Soldiers and surveillan­ce aircraft were deployed in the Kruger Park, while stricter criteria for rhino hunting permits saw applicatio­ns tumble to 90 in 2012, down from 222 a year before.Rhinos are victims of a booming demand for their horns, which some people in Asia think have medicinal properties. South Africa and Vietnam last year signed a deal to tackle the trade.

The World Wildlife Foundation hailed the agreement but highlighte­d “an urgent need to work closely with countries which are transit routes for illicit rhino horn, specifical­ly Mozambique,” WWF South Africa rhino coordinato­r Jo Shaw said this week.

Poachers slaughtere­d a record 668 rhinos in South Africa last year as demand for their horns continued to surge on the black market in Asia.

Over 60% of the slaughtere­d pachyderms were from the vast Kruger National Park, South Africa’s largest wildlife reserve.

Five more animals have been killed since the start of this year.

South Africa is home to about three-quarters of Africa’s 20 000 or so white rhinos and 4 800 critically endangered black rhinos.

This week Thai and Vietnamese airport authoritie­s seized over 27kg of rhino horn.

The number of rhinos poached in South Africa has risen sharply from 13 in 2007 to 448 in 2011. — SapaAFP

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