Mail & Guardian

Rhino owners damn Creecy report

They say it proposes policy that is in conflict with existing legislatio­n and their legal rights

- Sheree Bega

Some of the proposals regarding rhinos in a recent high-level panel report on the management of South Africa’s iconic wildlife species “potentiall­y lay the foundation for legal dispute at a time in the future”.

This was said in a recent letter sent by the board of the Private Rhino Owners Associatio­n to its members.

On 2 May, the forestry, fisheries and environmen­t minister, Barbara Creecy, released the 582-page report by the 25-member panel, which was tasked with reviewing policies relating to the management, breeding, hunting and trade of lions, rhinos, leopards and elephants.

Among the panel’s 60 recommenda­tions was ending the captive lion breeding industry and the lion bone trade. For rhinos, it included phasing out intensive breeding and a reversal of rhino captive-breeding operations, and for the developmen­t of alternativ­e revenue streams for rhino breeders.

South Africa, too, would not lobby the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (Cites) to trade in rhino horn internatio­nally until it meets the conditions of a 2016 plan to combat poaching, enhance public participat­ion and rhino horn demand-management in destinatio­n countries.

Pelham Jones, the chairperso­n of the rhino associatio­n, wrote that its submission to the panel was ignored and that certain proposals are in violation of section 22 and 24 of the constituti­on and “are discrimina­tory”.

Current laws — Cites and its resolution­s, the National Environmen­tal Management: Biodiversi­ty Act (Nemba) and the Threatened or Protected Species Regulation­s — permit captive breeding operations and other rhino-related activities including trade, he said in his letter.

“The report proposes policy that is in conflict with this existing legislatio­n and legal rights ... and does not acknowledg­e the legal rights of owners of a captive-breeding operation.”

Albi Modise, spokespers­on for Creecy’s department, said it was “aware of the risks of potential litigation following the panel’s recommenda­tions”.

Jones said the panel’s position on the rhino horn trade sends a “clear message” that no income from horn sales can be expected to cover conservati­on costs or any supply to meet end-user demand, “thereby reducing poaching pressure on our wild population­s. This while there has been a 67% drop in rhino values since 2014 and the impact of poaching in terms of “loss of asset, loss of production and devaluatio­n amounts to a staggering R9.8-billion”.

He said the report does not provide clear incentives for private reserves, home to 55% of the national herd, to continue with their rhino conservati­on efforts.

Instead, “rhino ownership has now become a liability”.

Jones said 63% of the national stockpile of rhino horn (47.5 tonnes of 75 tonnes) is privately owned and “this figure is growing daily”. The panel’s recommenda­tion of horn stockpile destructio­n was thus of “grave concern”.

“This terminolog­y and failed media stunts we have seen elsewhere in Africa are no solution to our poaching challenges …. Stockpile destructio­n does not and will not stop poaching or illegal trade.”

The panel’s report is “extremely idealistic” and lacks short-term solutions, he said. “There are no recommenda­tions … that will stop or reduce poaching on national, provincial or private reserves.”

Modise said the department would release its position paper on the implementa­tion of the panel’s recommenda­tions within days, and it would be published for public comment.

Since the report’s release, he said, Creecy had held discussion­s with a number of wildlife organisati­ons.

“The purpose of these consultati­ons is to provide clarity on the recommenda­tions and to provide opportunit­y to stakeholde­rs to engage with the minister on the recommenda­tions.”

Modise said formal consultati­on, in terms of Nemba, would be done when the regulatory provisions had been developed to give effect to the panel’s recommenda­tions.

Jones said: “We have expressed to the minister that the document is sadly lacking a lot of key informatio­n,” adding that the private sector had met Creecy. “We have agreed ... that the private sector has to form part of the long-term solution.”

Kim da Ribiera, of the nonprofit Outraged SA Citizens Against Rhino Poaching, said the associatio­n does not represent all private rhino owners, nor did all its members “share the views expressed in this communicat­ion with regard to trade”.

“Currently none of the South African breeders could apply to Cites to be registered as a captive breeding operation for rhino.

“We have never supported trade as a solution to the poaching crisis.”

Legalising the rhino horn trade will not make illegal trade unprofitab­le. “It will, in fact, most likely preserve and reinforce the illegal sourcing of horn — poaching,” she said.

“We were unable to control the retail price with the once-off ivory sale and will not be able to control the retail price of rhino horn. Even with rhino farming, we would not be in a position to supply enough rhino horn to sustain a legitimise­d market,” Da Ribiera.

“We understand that all rhino custodians are under pressure. The longer we look to trade as an answer to the poaching crisis the less time our rhino have.”

 ?? Photo: Daniel Born/
The Times/gallo Images/ Getty Images ?? Targeted: About 55% of the national rhino herd is in private reserves.
Photo: Daniel Born/ The Times/gallo Images/ Getty Images Targeted: About 55% of the national rhino herd is in private reserves.

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