Sunday Times

It’s all true: Kruger’s rhinos are set to move

Cabinet has signed off on plan that SANParks still denies exists

- PEARLIE JOUBERT joubertp@sundaytime­s.co.za

THE evacuation of hundreds of rhinos from the Kruger National Park has received cabinet support — even as the national parks board continues to insist there are no such plans.

Minister of Environmen­tal Affairs Edna Molewa is expected to announce on Tuesday the removal of rhinos from the Kruger, taking them out of the poachers’ firing line.

Yesterday, however, SANParks spokesman Isaac Phaahla said there was “no cabinet approval”.

Asked whether there had been a SANParks board proposal to Molewa for the removal of rhinos, Phaahla said, “No.”

Neverthele­ss, a Department of Environmen­tal Affairs statement carries the announceme­nt of the cabinet “approving the recommende­d strategic interventi­ons to secure the rhino population”. One of the interventi­ons is the removal of rhinos from the park.

A Sunday Times report in July that broke the news of the rhino removal was denied at the time by SANParks, with the chairman, Kuseni Dlamini, calling it “grossly misleading”.

Of the rhinos to be moved, 260 will be sold to private buyers and another 250 taken to a safe location.

The decision to move the animals comes against a background of increased poaching of rhinos in the Kruger. The Sunday Times has establishe­d that in July the Kruger Park lost 59 rhinos and another seven in the first five days of August.

A report to the SANParks board on March 26 said there had been an average escalation of 70% a year in rhino poaching. This added urgency to the decision to move some of the rhinos to ensure that the species did not become extinct. The report said that more anti-poaching efforts would not be enough to save the rhinos.

It said “most concerning was that recorded birth rates equalled [rhino] death rates”. It listed three elements to manage the threat against the animals:

To create an intensive protection zone in the Kruger;

To reduce the demand for rhino horn; and

To provide horn for the market. This was vigorously advocated by private rhino owners, and now also by the state.

The report also detailed plans to set up rhino sanctuarie­s by removing rhinos from high density areas in the Kruger to stimulate their birth rate.

This comes as a group of concerned citizens, a Cape Town aviation company and the DA called for an investigat­ion into SANParks’s anti-poaching

260 will be sold to private buyers and another 250 taken to a safe location

strategies, or offered help.

The public protector, Thuli Madonsela, was asked by a Johannesbu­rg attorney, Christophe­r Bean, to investigat­e SANParks and the Department of Environmen­tal Affairs for “maladminis­tration in the combating of rhino poaching in the Kruger”.

Bean said in his letter that it was urgent that Madonsela investigat­e SANParks and the department because both entities were in favour of selling South Africa’s rhino horn stockpile, amounting to 20 tons and worth about R10-billion.

Bean said such a sale would conflict “with their fiduciary and constituti­onal obligation” to preserve rhinos.

Cape Town aviation firm Advanced Aviation Logistics has offered SANParks seven heavy-duty Russian helicopter­s — capable of moving three to four rhinos a day — to help with the evacuation of rhinos.

DA environmen­t spokeswoma­n Terri Stander said the party would lodge a complaint with the public protector asking for an investigat­ion into the failings behind rhino conservati­on.

 ??  ?? SAFER PLACE: Edna Molewa
SAFER PLACE: Edna Molewa

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