Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

COMMENT On the horns of a dilemma

With poachers winning the war, should SA legalise the trade in rhino horn?

- TANYA WATERWORTH | Reuters Bushveld Jock of the

A BABY rhino crying next to its butchered and bloodied mother as vultures circle.

That is the emotive scene that doesn’t tug, but rips the heartstrin­gs of anyone who is even vaguely conservati­on savvy, yet the slaughter of rhinos continues unabated.

And looming on the horizon is the equally emotive battle as to whether legal trade in rhino horn should be allowed. Due to the huge security costs in protecting rhinos, their value at auctions has all but collapsed. Most private game reserves now remove the horns on a regular basis.

A meeting is being held in Eswatini (Swaziland) next Friday by Legal Trade For Rhino Survival (LTRS), which will look at whether a legal captive-bred rhino industry could be sustainabl­e, and whether it could save the species from extinction.

Attending this high-level get-together will be Eswatini ministers and government officials, diplomatic corps members, scientists and some leading conservati­onists.

This comes shortly after China lifted its ban on the domestic trade of rhino horns and tiger bones for scientific, medical and cultural purposes.

Last Monday, the Chinese State Council announced “under special circumstan­ces, regulation on the sales and use of these products will be strengthen­ed and any related actions will be authorised, and the trade volume will be strictly controlled”.

This will include the use of powdered forms of rhino horns, and bones from dead tigers, to be allowed in qualified hospitals recognised by the National Administra­tion of Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine.

The announceme­nt caused shock waves across the global wildlife conservati­on industry, with the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) expressing its “profound concern” and calling on China to maintain the ban on rhino horn and tiger bone trade.

WWF Wildlife practice leader Margaret Kinnaird said: “It is deeply concerning that China has reversed its 25-year-old tiger bone and rhino horn ban, allowing trade that will have devastatin­g consequenc­es globally.

“The resumption of a legal market for these products is an enormous setback to efforts to protect tigers and rhinos in the wild.”

The bewilderme­nt over the Chinese move was also compounded by the fact that 10 months ago, China closed its domestic trade on elephant ivory, a move that got a big thumbs-up around the world and was seen as a major step forward in elephant conservati­on.

Save The Rhino Internatio­nal described the Chinese unbanning of captive-bred rhino horn and tiger bones as “a Pandora’s Box that should never have been opened”, with chief executive Cathy Dean saying: “The ramificati­ons for this announceme­nt are huge. Not only is it showing China’s lack of support for rhino conservati­on or putting an end to the illegal wildlife trade, it creates loopholes for the illegal rhino horn trade.”

She asked how, after being removed from official traditiona­l Chinese medicine lists 25 years ago, rhino horns and tiger bones could now be made available for medical research?

“We fear this move is motivated by money. The now open trade will make it much harder for law enforcemen­t officials tasked with tackling the demand for illegal rhino horn.”

Under a Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species (Cites) agreement, internatio­nal trade in rhino horn is banned. There are more than 180 signatorie­s to Cites, with its next conference scheduled for May next year in Sri Lanka.

While some conspiracy theorists may believe there’s a possible shady subterrane­an link between the Chinese announceme­nt and the LTRS meeting scheduled for next week, KwaZulu-Natal conservati­on legend Dr George Hughes has put his support solidly behind the move to legalise internatio­nal trade in rhino horn.

He has been outspoken on the issue for many years, saying it is the only way to save the rhino from extinction.

“A legal trade would reduce the illegal trade, and at the same time would reduce poaching pressure on formal protected areas and private sector rhino holdings.

“The income derived from legal trade would accrue to both formal conservati­on agencies with legal horn resources, and most certainly for the private- sector owners, who have invested time and money in rhinoceros management,” he said.

Hughes added that once legal trade was establishe­d, “there would be a slight increase in demand because of the fact that it would be legal. The rhino resource in South Africa alone is large enough to cater for a much larger demand”.

He said that in many the province’s private reserves, rhino horns were cropped every 18 months from living rhinos, which could produce 1kg of horn.

Having been a powerhouse at the former KZN Parks Board, Hughes also lamented the killing of many rangers in the war on poachers.

It is estimated that well over 1 000 have died while protecting rhinos and elephants in Africa.

“This is not what nature conservati­on is all about, and it is a tragedy that such things happen in an ever-increasing frequency for a product that can be supplied without killing anything or anybody.”

Some cynical commentato­rs have said massive profits from the legal trading of horn would simply move from illegal poaching syndicates to a few well-to-do private game farm owners.

Or is some out of the box thinking required to be the last-ditch plan in saving the rhino ?

While the Department of Environmen­tal Affairs was opaque in its response to the Chinese unbanning of rhino horn trade, saying “discussion­s will need to be held” with China, and that it (the South African government) had “effective actions” in place to combat rhino poaching, it was a fact that more rhinos were being poached than were being born.

Well-respected wildlife veterinari­an Dave Cooper, who will be in New York next week to receive an award from the Wild Tomorrow Fund for his tireless efforts to save the rhino from extinction, said he also backed legalising the trade in rhino horns.

Having spent years at ground zero, he has first-hand knowledge of just how close to the abyss rhinos now stand. His approach is pragmatic.

“It seems a pity to have to breed rhinos, but we are losing the fight. We can’t carry on the way we are now. The private sector was very supportive of rhino conservati­on, but they are losing hope and disinvesti­ng, they just cannot sustain the huge security costs.

“Rhinos don’t have value any more as they are too expensive to protect. The last auction I went to, hippo and buffalo got higher prices.” .

Cooper highlighte­d that the real challenge would be regulating the legal trade of horn, and that, if properly done, it could provide much-needed income for local communitie­s and government conservati­on bodies.

“It’s sustainabl­e utilisatio­n, the animal is not being killed. It can be to everyone’s benefit if it’s done properly and transparen­tly. There must be incentive for communitie­s in terms of a levy on the sale of the horn so that they are willing to protect rhinos. It won’t be a cake walk. But those who are opposing this are those who haven’t ever been on the ground with the rhino.”

And he should know, he has attended more poaching scenes than any other vet in the country. He and his team have felt the wrenching heartache every time they find a bewildered baby rhino trying to cuddle up to the bloodied remains of its mother. All for a piece of horn. TOMORROW will mark the centenary of the armistice – 100 years since the guns fell silent all over the world bringing an end to the most unimaginab­le conflict the globe had ever seen.

Most of us have forgotten the significan­ce of it all – if we ever knew it in the first place.

We’re not like Britain where there are red poppies everywhere you turn at this time of year. Some might argue that’s because South Africa fought the empire’s war, which is wrong, because Australia and Canada did, too. The poppy is as strong there as it is in the UK.

Others might argue that it’s because World War I was a white man’s war, which is just as farcical as the men of the Mendi (and the thousands of other Native Military Corps members) would remind us or the soldiers of the Cape Corps who chased Von Lettow-Vorbeck and then took and held Square Hill.

It’s even more bizarre when you think that the decision by King George V to officially mark every Armistice Day – and the closest Sunday as Remembranc­e Sunday – with a two-minute silence owes its genesis to a practice which was begun in Cape Town in May 1918.

The first minute was to pause and give thanks for those who survived.

The second to remember those who died.

The silence would follow the Noon Day gun and break with reveille sounded by a bugler. Sir

Percy Fitzpatric­k, of

fame, wrote to Lord Milner after the war to suggest it. Milner wrote to the King and by November 11, 1919 it was being observed throughout the British Empire.

The British and Commonweal­th Ex-Servicemen’s League, of which the SA Legion is the senior member, is the custodian of the Remembranc­e Day observance­s. It was founded in Cape Town in 1921.

It was set up not just to remember but to look after those who had answered the call, only to return to a nation that no longer cared as they struggled with what we now know is PTSD. The SA Legion built houses, including two major developmen­ts in Soweto, and fought for equal pensions.

The Comrades Marathon, run for the first time that same year, and is today perhaps the world’s most famous ultra-marathon, also traces its roots back to the “Great War” and the sacrifices made.

The people who returned from the war had a dream that no one would ever have to experience anything like it again.

Sadly, less than 20 years later, the world would be at war again, even more brutal and cruel than anything that preceded it – precisely because of the mistakes made in trying to end the first one.

The Treaty of Versailles – and the desire for retributio­n – sowed the seeds for the tyranny of Adolf Hitler and the Nazis, another war – and the Holocaust.

We’ve never had a world war since, but we’ve never been truly at peace either. We have forgotten all of that at our peril.

Tomorrow is high time we started rememberin­g anew.

 ?? African News Agency (ANA) Archives ?? A WHITE rhinoceros and her calf in Pilanesber­g National Park in a file photo. This is the what we would all like to see when visiting a game reserve but, instead, we are faced with the sight of baby rhinos refusing to leave the sides of their slaughtere­d mothers, all for a piece of horn.
African News Agency (ANA) Archives A WHITE rhinoceros and her calf in Pilanesber­g National Park in a file photo. This is the what we would all like to see when visiting a game reserve but, instead, we are faced with the sight of baby rhinos refusing to leave the sides of their slaughtere­d mothers, all for a piece of horn.
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