Mail & Guardian

Success story: Real venom in the Green Scorpions

Crime busters secure a 97% conviction rate and register more criminal dockets for range of crimes

- Sheree Bega

Byungsu Kim and Young IL Sunwoo arrived in South Africa with a plan: to find and collect the oldest, largest and rarest plants they could lay their hands on. Just as they were about to make off with thousands of endemic conophytum succulents they had poached — using a receipt from a nursery in the Western Cape to get an export permit — police and Cape Nature officials pounced on the South Korean smugglers.

The case is one of several successful prosecutio­ns of environmen­tal offences by the Green Scorpions highlighte­d in the 2019- 2020 National Environmen­tal Compliance and Enforcemen­t Report.

For their role in the illicit trade in the dumpling-like succulents found in the Karoo and up the southwest coast, which are prized by Asian collectors, Kim and Sunwoo were given a suspended sentence of six years and fined R2.5-million each. Sunwoo was deported to South Korea. Kim, who had a nursery in California, was extradited to Los Angeles and faces trial in December.

He was arrested on an Interpol warrant for attempting to illegally export more than $600 000 worth of succulents that he had pulled out of the ground at remote state parks in northern California.

The compliance report details three other recent succulent theft prosecutio­ns in the Western Cape, involving protected species, to feed the illegal internatio­nal trade.

Crime trends continue

The Green Scorpions continue to focus on high risk species such as rhinos, elephants, pangolins and cycads “while still ensuring other species receive protection from the inspectora­te”.

Countrywid­e, the same trends in environmen­tal crimes persist. Illegal hunting and illegal entry into protected areas are the predominan­t crimes in the green category (biodiversi­ty and protected areas), with Kwazulu-natal recording, at 395, the highest reported number of incidents.

In the brown category (pollution, waste, environmen­tal impact assessment), illegal assessment­s is the main crime being detected. Gauteng, for example, recorded 168 incidents, behind Kwazulu-natal at 236.

The Green Scorpions have a growing force to fight these crimes. Their numbers have climbed to 3 240, up from 2 675 in 2018-2019. In addition, in municipali­ties, there are now 421 designated environmen­tal management inspectors, an increase from 382 in the same period.

The National Prosecutin­g Authority recorded 883 criminal trials in which a verdict was handed down in cases involving waste and pollution, protected species and the marine and coastal environmen­t (blue category, integrated coastal management).

Of these verdicts, 857 were finalised through conviction­s and 26 resulted in acquittals, translatin­g into a 97.1% conviction rate.

Several fishing trawlers that ventured into marine protected areas were charged, according to the report. At the same time, successes of Interpol-led operations such as Operation Blizzard and Operation Thunderbal­l netted successful seizures and arrests in the illicit reptile, rhino horn and cycad trade.

Eskom and Sasol

The number of facilities inspected rose to 5 445 in 2019-2020 from 4 530 in 2019-2018, with more than half in the waste and pollution sector.

Proactive inspection­s conducted increased to 4 595 from 2 574. Reactive inspection­s rose by 29%.

Eskom’s Kendal power station in Mpumalanga was red-flagged for exceeding emission limits and for poor maintenanc­e of its pollution control equipment. It has been ordered to include timeframes in its plan to address this.

At the Lethabo power station in the Free State, noncomplia­nces included the excess of hazardous particles in air (particulat­e matter), ash spillages that cause dust fallout and groundwate­r contaminat­ion from unlined wastewater dams.

“An enforcemen­t response was initiated in May 2020, which allowed the facility to make representa­tions to the allegation­s of wrongdoing.

“A compliance notice was issued to the Camden [power station] in August 2018 but by July last year limited or no progress was made. A decision was made to compel Eskom to implement the actions within certain timeframes.”

A compliance notice with timeframes was issued to Tutuka power station in Mpumalanga in May to rectify, among other contravent­ions, emissions exceeding the limits and breaches of water licences, which cause ground and surface-water pollution.

At Duvha power station, also in Mpumalanga, noncomplia­nces and contravent­ions included groundwate­r contaminat­ion and excessive dust and particulat­e matter emissions. The facility has also failed to provide additional informatio­n requested by the Green Scorpions.

An enforcemen­t response was initiated against Sasol’s Secunda refinery for groundwate­r pollution, emissions exceeding relaxed limits and waste pollution, among other contravent­ions. An extension was granted under Covid-19 for it to submit representa­tions.

The report says there will be a concerted effort by the Green Scorpions to increase compliance and enforcemen­t activities in areas of poor air quality, with a specific focus on declared priority areas.

Covid and the environmen­t

Fewer rhinos were poached countrywid­e this year under the lockdown, says Ishaam Abader, the deputy director general of regulatory compliance and sector monitoring at the department of environmen­t, forestry and fisheries.

But inspectors have noticed a marked increase in certain types of environmen­tal offences this year.

“In the Eastern Cape, there has been a steep incline in the number of illegal dog-hunting activities as well as the mass invasions of protected forests.

“Limpopo has seen a rise in illegal activities relating to a range of wildlife species as well as elevated levels of deforestat­ion.

“The Western Cape has formed multidisci­plinary task teams to respond to the increase in the volume of healthcare risk waste resulting from the response to Covid-19,” according to the report.

There will be a concerted effort to increase compliance in areas of poor air quality

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