Sunday Times

Kruger poachers get power rifles

A gun manufactur­er in the Czech Republic is implicated in flooding Africa with thousands of high-calibre hunting rifles. Now poachers are even more deadly, writes Don Pinnock

- By DON PINNOCK

● A gunrunning network dubbed the Rhino Rifle Syndicate is behind a worldwide plot to equip poachers in the Kruger National Park with high-powered Czech-made rifles.

An investigat­ion by the Conflict

Awareness Project, an internatio­nal organisati­on that investigat­es arms trafficker­s, has traced how the syndicate helped elevate small-scale rhino poaching to an industrial level.

It found that the syndicate obtained the CZ rifles from the manufactur­er and distribute­d them to poachers by exploiting lax gun regulation­s and government corruption.

The gunrunning networks include police and safari operators.

The report of a four-year investigat­ion implicates the Mozambican ministry of the interior, and other state authoritie­s there and in SA.

Afour-year investigat­ion, Follow The Guns, by the Conflict Awareness Project (CAP), has uncovered evidence of a gunrunning network operated over five countries and three continents. Headed by CAP director Kathi Lynn Austin, the organisati­on identified members of what it calls the Rhino Rifle Syndicate. It pieced together how this syndicate hatched a worldwide conspiracy to equip poaching teams in Mozambique and SA with rifles manufactur­ed in the Czech Republic.

Some of these rifles were intended for the American market and bore a roll-mark reading CZ-USA, Kansas City, KS. These rifles were designed and marketed to kill big game and have wreaked havoc in the Kruger National Park, home to the largest concentrat­ion of rhinos in the world.

About 90% of the weapons recovered in the Kruger were produced by Ceská zbrojovka Uherský Brod, or CZUB, the Czech Republic’s biggest gunmaker. They’re commonly referred to as CZs.

These rifles were chosen by the Rhino Rifle Syndicate because they fire .375 or .458 calibre rounds, cartridges powerful enough to kill big game with a single shot.

Some of the recovered CZ rifles bear trademark

engravings from CZ-USA, CZUB’s wholly owned US subsidiary, located in Kansas. They were ostensibly made for the American market, but were diverted to Africa for use by rhino poachers.

For many years, according to the CAP report, the Rhino Rifle Syndicate has exploited lax gun regulation­s and government corruption to traffic firearms undetected. Once the firearms arrive in Africa, they are acquired by a transnatio­nal criminal organisati­on and its local rhino-poaching affiliates.

By systematic­ally supplying the transnatio­nal criminal organisati­on with firearms, says the report, the syndicate helped elevate small-scale commercial rhino poaching to an extraordin­ary industrial level. It obtains the CZ rifles from the manufactur­er en masse and distribute­s them among poachers. In this way it has establishe­d a well-co-ordinated traffickin­g network and two dedicated internatio­nal gun-supply chains.

Members of the gunrunning networks include business elites, government officials, police, safari operators, arms dealers, middlemen and local poaching bosses.

The report implicates the Mozambican ministry of the interior, and other state authoritie­s there and in SA.

Gunrunners “proved adept at penetratin­g the highest levels of government, hijacking high-level security forces and the office of the national Mozambique police force, the commander’s closest advisers and those in charge of the arms-licensing authority”.

The report continues: “These officials enabled the gunrunning network to obtain paperwork on false grounds. They cleared the way for its criminal activities by providing seemingly legitimate licences for imports and sales.

“They assisted in countering threats by preventing law enforcemen­t monitoring and keeping criminal investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns from moving forward.” This ensures the success of their criminal enterprise, carrying out cross-border wildlife crimes on a catastroph­ic scale.

In February 2015, says the report, the head of the Kruger’s anti-poaching forces, Maj-Gen Johan Jooste, released e-mail correspond­ence from CZUB and the results of a trace on 28 CZ rifles recovered at rhino-poaching crime scenes.

This indicated that CZ rifles were moving extraordin­arily quickly from CZUB to SA’s rhino-poaching crime scenes, a sign that experience­d gun trafficker­s were at work. The informatio­n the Kruger provided was actionable. However, “Kruger authoritie­s told us that the park did not act upon the informatio­n in a concerted fashion at the time,” says the report.

According to the report, “the collective failure of Czech, Mozambican and South African authoritie­s to address the gun-supply chains — despite the evidence provided in 2015 and 2016 — enabled them to continue their expansion”.

Why the Czech Republic? The country serves as the headquarte­rs of the highly organised Vietnamese mafia’s European branch. The branch’s primary base of operations is a 35ha enclave called SAPA Market, or “Little Hanoi”, near Prague.

The Vietnamese syndicate’s European branch has been caught smuggling an array of contraband, including cigarettes, drugs and counterfei­t Gucci and Prada luxury goods.

In 2012, after Czech law enforcemen­t arrested scores of suspected wildlife criminals and confiscate­d 10 rhino horns, it became clear that the Czech Republic had become a primary wildlife crime node between the eastern and the western hemisphere­s.

Pseudo-hunting, rhino-horn smuggling and the rhino-poaching syndicate’s rifle-supply chains all converge in the Czech Republic.

By using a “follow-the-guns” methodolog­y, the CAP documented the movement of these firearms, starting from their place of manufactur­e to their end use by poachers.

“The firearms predominan­tly moved from CZUB’s company headquarte­rs in the Czech Republic, through arms dealers in Portugal, to gun retail shops in Mozambique. After arriving at the Mozambican gun shops, the rifles were bought by South African and Mozambican middlemen.

“High-ranking Mozambique government officials and police officers conspired with the middlemen to facilitate the purchases. After the middlemen purchased the rifles, they were disseminat­ed among poaching teams by business and political elites, safari company staff, security forces and local poaching bosses.”

The CAP amassed dossiers detailing crimes committed by the key individual­s and companies involved in the syndicate. It presented these to law enforcemen­t in five affected countries — the Czech Republic, the US, Portugal, Mozambique and SA. Until now, these authoritie­s have done nothing.

Gunrunners ‘proved adept at penetratin­g the highest levels of government, hijacking high-level security forces’ The rifles escalating the poaching tsunami

 ??  ??
 ?? Picture: © Tuck Gaisford ?? Investigat­or Kathi Lynn Austin of the Conflict Awareness Project beside a recently poached rhino in the Kruger National Park.
Picture: © Tuck Gaisford Investigat­or Kathi Lynn Austin of the Conflict Awareness Project beside a recently poached rhino in the Kruger National Park.
 ?? Picture: © Russell Bergh ?? Confiscate­d rhino horns lie waiting to be burnt.
Picture: © Russell Bergh Confiscate­d rhino horns lie waiting to be burnt.
 ??  ?? CZ-452 special military rifle
CZ-452 special military rifle
 ??  ?? CZ USA 550 Badlands rifle
CZ USA 550 Badlands rifle
 ??  ?? CZ 512 American rifle
CZ 512 American rifle
 ?? Picture: © Pablo Levinas ?? Anti-poaching units get ready for battle.
Picture: © Pablo Levinas Anti-poaching units get ready for battle.
 ?? Picture: © Bruce Leslie ?? The Kruger National Park has hailed the success of its K9 unit in the fight against rhino poaching.
Picture: © Bruce Leslie The Kruger National Park has hailed the success of its K9 unit in the fight against rhino poaching.

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