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Namibia has created wildlife conservatories that employ local people, pay them to use their land as wildlife reserves, and relies on their eyes and ears on the ground to spot poaching — rehabilitated poachers are now assisting in the fight against poaching... The figures are a testimony to what works: In 2010, two rhino were poached in Namibia. In South Africa, the figure was 333. In 2011 in Namibia, zero were poached compared to 448 in South Africa. Last year, one rhino was poached in Namibia, while 668 were killed in South Africa. And up to February 20 this year, no rhinos had been poached in Namibia, while 102 had been poached in South Africa. The total number of rhinos poached between 2006 and 2012 stand at five in Namibia and 1,805 in South Africa....
Durban - The attack on Hluhluwe farmer Peter-John Hassard, who was shot in the stomach last month, may have been an attempted hit by rhino poachers, his father believes. Peter Hassard, who farms with his son, said on Tuesday he was present during a meeting with the police when an informer named people involved in fighting rhino poaching, including Peter-John, who were on a “hit list”....
Environmental Affairs Minister Edna Molewa and Mozambican Tourism Minister Carvalho Muaria will take concrete action to combat rhino poaching, her department said on Saturday. "We had very frank discussions with our counterparts in Mozambique and we are glad that we are moving forward. It is an indication that we can work together to curb this problem of poaching," Molewa said in a statement. Talks between Molewa and Muaria on Friday focused on joint co-operation between South Africa, Mozambique and Zimbabwe on the matter of cross-border conservation of the Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Conservation Area (TFCA), established in 2002....
South Africa is assessing the costs of rebuilding a fence between the Kruger National Park and Mozambique to deter poachers who’ve killed 350 rhinos this year, Minister of Water and Environmental Affairs Edna Molewa said.
These words are from a poem 11-year-old Aaminah Patel wrote to raise awareness about rhino poaching. Aaminah, and her eight-year-old sister, Afeefah, were recognised yesterday as Rhino SA "Little Champions" at Robertsham Primary School, south of Johannesburg. Aaminah said her concern for rhinos started when her father showed her a video. "I wanted to cry. The rhino's whole face was cut out and it was bleeding to death, struggling to breathe."....
Stars including Leonardo DiCaprio and Edward Norton created a social media storm to help a British animal conservation charity win a $775,000 (£500,000) grant to stop rhino poaching in Africa. The...
A new weapon in the war against rhino poachers passed a field test in May, 2013, when unmanned aerial vehicles (aka drone) flights successfully protected rhi...
Could a Chinese company be making a second attempt at establishing a rhino farm in the country to harvest horn? It would be one way for China to get around the CITES rhino horn ban as domestic trade is not covered by the international agreement. China has a track record for getting around trade bans of endangered species. The most notable one is the establishment of tiger farms in the country. There are thought to be as many as 5,000 tigers kept in small cages in the country, that’s more than the estimated 3,500 tigers left in the wild.... The illusion of the rhino park of the Mekong Group though may have been shattered a couple of weeks ago with an investigation undertaken by the China News Service and published in Newsweek China. Newsweek China has no connection with the American Newsweek publication and it is run by China’s second largest news agency. In its report they quote an unnamed source as saying that the Mekong Group has connections with the group behind the Africa View project. It confirms suspicions by many in the country that the safari park is nothing but a front for another rhino farm in China....
.... According to world renowned conservationist Dr Ian Player, this “remnant of the dinosaur age” will be wiped out within the next decade if the poaching crisis is not addressed through a collaborative, national and international rescue campaign. Dr Player also pointed out that if it weren’t for the drive to preserve rhinos in the 1950’s, there wouldn’t be any national parks in South Africa. “It is because of the white rhino that we have our national parks where tourists can learn about the soul of Africa. Nature is in our souls....
Read more: http://mype.co.za/new/2013/06/evil-personified-is-destroying-the-landscape-of-the-human-soul/#ixzz2VWw4Kf2g
Rhino, elephants, lion and other wildlife is being poached and hunted at alarming rates as the illegal trade becomes more lucrative. Does the younger generation in South Africa and around the world care if we lose our planet’s iconic species? We didn’t take a poll or conduct a study, however, a goodly number of those that contact us here at NIKELA are the young. They want to know how they can help stop the poaching because they can’t wrap their brain (or better yet heart) around people who can be so brutal to other living creatures.... http://www.nikela.org/blog/saving-africas-wildlife-do-the-young-care-are-they-aware
Cape Town - South Africa has been introduced to a potential new weapon in its war against rampant rhino poaching: an unmanned drone similar to those used by the US military against the Taliban in Afghanistan. But unlike the military version that typically unleashes deadly fire on its target, this drone sends only images from its high-resolution cameras, and GPS positions, that can be used by a ground-based anti-poaching unit to home in on suspected poachers. Last week, the makers of the Falcon drone – more correctly, the unmanned aerial vehicle or UAV – put the machine through its paces for an audience at the OIifants West conservancy that borders the Kruger National Park in Limpopo and that forms part of the unfenced Greater Kruger National Park.... http://www.iol.co.za/scitech/science/environment/drones-to-help-fight-in-anti-poaching-war-1.1526137#.UazRn0DVCSo
WASHINGTON _ The exact location of the anti-poaching operation is secret, as is the number of rangers who will be on duty. Also confidential: where the drones will fly as they search out poachers intent on slaying rhinos for their horns _ one killed every 11 hours in South Africa alone. But over the next several days, Tom Snitch thinks that his project, at a private game farm adjoining South Africa’s famed Kruger National Park, will prove that unmanned aerial vehicles can end the scourge of rhinoceros poaching.... http://www.ryot.org/u-s-drones-will-protect-rhinos-by-combating-poachers/180025
The Ministry of Environment and Tourism (MET) has placed on tender the trophy hunting of two aged male black rhinoceros in eastern Kavango during the current hunting season which ends in November.
The hunting on state land began in 2009, after the practice was approved by Cabinet in 2007. This will mark only the second time that black rhino’s will be offered for hunting since the UN Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) approved an annual quota of five rhinos. In 2012, Cabinet endorsed the killing of the two black rhinos, having already approved three black rhino concessions during the last three hunting seasons....
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After a year and a half, I could have done the route blindfolded on my trusty, hardy, beat-up bike, Brunhilda.
Ten minutes out of my Truc Bach apartment, the right blinker begins blinking and I take a turn on to the one-way Tran Phu Street for the final leg of my journey to the office in Hanoi.
On March 18, I forgot to switch on my right blinker. No big deal, since I was merging into a one-way street, but the young traffic cop who stopped me was having none of my protestations. It’s the law in Vietnam, he told me sternly, and if you break it, there are consequences. Cannot argue with that, so I paid the fine....
Locally, the call to legalise rhino horn to combat its illicit trade on the black market has been growing over the last few years, but an international NGO is disputing the logic behind such calls.... The Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) said recently in a statement entitled, Greed beats logic: Why a legal rhino trade won’t work, that first and foremost, if trade in rhino horn is legalised, “…it would effectively be legitimising a huge transnational crime, rewarding the kingpins and middle men for their persistence in outlasting the forces of law and order.”...
“With a few notable exceptions, it’s fair to say that South Africa has a poor record of enforcing CITES recommendations and protecting its iconic wildlife. Under the guise of legitimate legal hunting, it has recently presided over the farcical and clearly criminal phenomena of ‘pseudo hunting’ in which middlemen arranged permits for Thai bar workers and other individuals to hunt rhino; the resulting ‘trophies’ could then be legally exported, most often to Vietnam.”...
Drone & New UMD Tech Help Protect Wildlife from PoachersCOLLEGE PARK, MD, Jun 12, 2013 (Menafn - Marketwired via COMTEX) --A series of test flights. COLLEGE PARK, MD, Jun 12, 2013 (Menafn - Marketwired via COMTEX) --A series of "flawless" test flights have shown that unmanned aerialvehicles, or drones, combined with anti-poaching computer softwarecan successfully protect rhinoceros from poachers in the SouthAfrican bush. In response to a deadly epidemic of rhino killings, which are beingslaughtered for the ivory in their horns, visiting scholar Tom Snitchof the University of Maryland Institute for Advanced Computer Studies(UMIACS) organized an all-volunteer expedition to conductexperimental anti-poaching surveillance near South Africa's KruegerNational Park. Between May 25 and May 31 the team flew about 20 testflights of an unmanned aerial vehicle, or drone. The UAV, on loanfrom its Denver-based manufacturer Falcon UAV, was equipped with aninfrared night vision camera and guided by a UMD-designed computerprogram that predicts the movements of rhinos and poachers. The testflights went perfectly, Snitch said....
394 rhinos killed in South Africa to date! - June, 11 2013. In 2013 rhino poaching in South Africa is running considerably ahead of 2012, which was the worst year on record by far. At that current rate, South Africa can expect to lose more than 900 rhinos this year, with 394 rhinos killed already. The Kruger National Park continues to be the most seriously affected by rhino poaching, with 257 animals being killed in the Park since the beginning of the year, which has prompted discussion about rebuilding the fence between the Kruger and Mozambique. 425 rhinos were killed in the Kruger National Park in 2012, and many of the poachers arrested in the Kruger Park have crossed from Mozambique, which is a major corridor for rhino poachers.
Three more suspected rhino poachers have been arrested in the Kruger National Park, bringing the number of arrests so far this year to 53, South African National Parks announced at the weekend.
A suspected rhino poacher was shot dead and another arrested at a game farm in Limpopo, police said on Monday "A worker, who usually puts out feeding for the rhinos, spotted strange tracks in the Cumberland area on Saturday," said spokeswoman Colonel Ronel Otto. "Farmers in the area, as well as members of the police and trackers, gathered and started following the tracks of what was suspected to be four poachers." The tracks were followed for more than 24 hours, and two private helicopters also assisted with the search. "One of the suspects was spotted sitting under a tree. He attempted to fire at one of the helicopters circling in the area; he also fired shots in the direction of the team tracking him," said Otto. The man, a Mozambican national, was shot and died on the scene. A Zimbabwean national was also arrested later on the farm. Police confiscated a hunting rifle and ammunition, as well as an axe. The serial number of the rifle was filed off, and the origin of the weapon is still being investigated, Otto said. The arrested suspect is expected to appear in the Thabazimbi Magistrate's Court soon to face charges of rhino poaching and possession of unlicensed firearms and ammuniti
Abel Mfana Mashabane, 26, from Phalaborwa, pleaded guilty to trespassing in a designated area after he and his friends were caught walking through the park in May. He told the court he had been framed by game rangers and that he suspected they had planted a rhino horn in his bag. During sentencing, Mashabane's lawyer told the court his client's hip was dislocated during his arrest, and that he could not be sent to prison. "Prison will be worse for him as he has been on crutches since the day of arrest. He has acknowledged the seriousness of the offence he faces, and that rhinos get killed on daily basis," his lawyer said. Magistrate Sheila Msibi did not find Mashabane guilty of possession of white rhino horn, because neither a carcass nor a killing site was located.
Poachers have killed 24 of the animals this year in exclusive sanctuaries
A formal memorandum of understanding aimed at controlling biodiversity crimes like rampant rhino poaching is ready for signing between South Africa and Mozambique. But the signing has been delayed over the past 18 months by Mozambique, although South Africa Environmental Affairs Minister Edna Molewa said she did not believe there was any sinister motive. It was partly the result of a new minister being appointed there.
Noting that two scheduled meetings had been postponed and that she wished the signing had happened “yesterday”, she said: “It is as urgent as possible.” Molewa was responding to questions at a media briefing on Monday after delivering her budget address in the National Assembly.
Many rhino poachers are believed to enter South Africa from Mozambique in the area where the border fence between the Kruger National Park and Mozambique’s Limpopo National Park was removed to allow the development of the multi-national Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park, or peace park. Kruger has borne the brunt of rhino poaching and this year at least 242 of the 350-plus animals poached thus far have been killed there....
The government is considering building a fence along the Mozambican border to combat rhino poachers, Water and Environmental Affairs Minister Edna Molewa says
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Excellent footage.. yes, if governments, like America and Britain.. but more especially China, stop sending tourists to countries that are not doing everything in their power to stop poaching, this would send a very powerful message to these countries that WILDLIFE IS WORTH MORE ALIVE THAN DEAD!!!!!!!!!!!