Record rhino poaching death statistics released by the South African Government


Environment News Service, January 14, 2013

CAPE TOWN, South Africa – Record rhino poaching death statistics released by the South African government Friday reveal a grim picture – 668 rhinos lost their lives to poachers in 2012 – up from 14 rhinos killed by poachers in 2005. Conservation scientists report that corrupt game industry insiders are now poaching rhinos alongside other criminal groups – all well organized, well financed and highly mobile.

20130116-232050.jpg
Rhino horns taken from a carcass

The 668 rhinos killed across South Africa in 2012 is an increase of nearly 50 percent from the 448 rhinos poachers killed in 2011. Five more rhinos were killed by poachers just since the beginning of this year.

A 2012 report by the international wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC, calls these rhino killings “an unprecedented conservation crisis for South Africa,” which until recently has had a stellar rhino conservation record.

TRAFFIC is a strategic alliance of the global conservation group WWF and the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, IUCN, which maintains the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.

The methods used in the most recent rhino killings show a new, very worrying dimension, says the TRAFFIC report, “The South Africa – Viet Nam Rhino Horn Trade Nexus,” co-authored by Dr. Jo Shaw, rhino co-ordinator with the South Africa chapter of WWF, and Tom Milliken of TRAFFIC.

“Typically, rhinos are killed by shooting with guns, usually AK-47 assault rifles. More recently, however, a growing number of rhinos have been killed by a single shot from a high-calibre weapon characteristically only used by wildlife industry professionals or, less frequently, have been darted with immobilization drugs and had their horns removed,” Shaw and Milliken report.

“The use of such equipment, and other evidence that has even suggested the presence of helicopters at crime scenes, represents a completely “new face” in terms of rhino poaching,” they write.

“Such developments underscore the emergence of corrupt game industry insiders into rhino poaching. Rogue game ranch owners, professional hunters, game capture operators, pilots and wildlife veterinarians have all entered the rhino poaching crisis and become active players,” write Shaw and Milliken.

“This is a unique and devastating development in South Africa, severely tarnishing the image of a key stakeholder in the rhino equation even if the majority of private rhino owners and wildlife industry personnel remain committed to protecting rhinos and supporting rhino conservation.”

A majority of the 2012 rhino deaths, 425, happened in Kruger National Park, South Africa’s premier safari destination, the new government statistics show. Poaching incidents in this park rose sharply from 252 in 2011.

In the TRAFFIC report, Show and Milliken write, “…the complicity of South African national and provincial officials undertaking or enabling illegal trade has been documented.”

“In terms of killing rhinos, four government rangers were arrested in Kruger National Park in 2012 and, at the Atherstone Nature Reserve in Limpopo, the reserve manager committed suicide after allegedly being implicated in five rhino deaths. Provincial administrators have repeatedly turned a blind eye to “pseudo-hunting,” especially in North West and Limpopo provinces, and allowed rhino hunts to transpire that violate TOPS [Threatened or Protected Species] regulations,” the TRAFFIC report states.”

20130116-232501.jpg

A White Rhino, Ceratotherium simum simum, cow and calf

“The most shocking aspect of the illegal trade in rhino horn has been the poaching of live rhinos on a brutal scale. For 16 years, between 1990 and 2005, rhino poaching losses in South Africa averaged 14 animals each year.”

“In 2008, this figure rose to 83 and, by 2009, the number had reached 122 rhinos. In 2010, poaching escalated dramatically throughout the year, nearly tripling the toll and reaching 333 rhinos killed. In 2011, the total again climbed to a new annual record of 448 rhinos lost,” they report. Last year, 668 rhinos were killed across South Africa.

Arrests of suspected poachers and smugglers in South Africa also increased in 2012, with 267 people now facing charges related to rhino crimes.

In November, a Thai man was sentenced to a record 40 years in prison for conspiring to smuggle rhino horns to Asia.

Rhino horns are believed to have medicinal properties and are seen as highly desirable status symbols in some Asian countries, notably Vietnam, whose native rhinos have recently been pushed into extinction.

While rhino horn is composed entirely of keratin, the same substance as hair and nails, and no medicinal value has been proven, the increased commercial value placed on rhino horn has drawn well-organized, well-financed and highly-mobile criminal groups into rhino poaching.

“Vietnam must curtail the nation’s rhino horn habit, which is fueling a poaching crisis in South Africa,” said Sabri Zain, TRAFFIC’s director of advocacy.

“Viet Nam appears to be the only country in the world where rhino horn is popularly gaining a reputation as an aphrodisiac,” the TRAFFIC report states, adding that the use of ground powdered rhino horn by wealthy Vietnamese to detoxify after drinking too much alcohol is “probably the most common routine usage promoted in the marketplace today.”

“Rhinos are being illegally killed, their horns hacked off and the animals left to bleed to death, all for the frivolous use of their horns as a hangover cure,” said Zain.

20130116-233110.jpg

Vietnamese man drinks from a rhino horn grinding bowl

In December, Vietnam and South Africa signed an agreement aimed at bolstering law enforcement and tackling illegal wildlife trade, including rhino horn trafficking.

The agreement paves the way for improved intelligence information sharing and joint efforts by the two nations to crack down on the criminal syndicates behind the smuggling networks.

“Whilst we commend South Africa and Vietnam for signing a Memorandum of Understanding regarding biodiversity conservation, we now need to see a joint Rhino Plan of Action being implemented, leading to more of these rhino horn seizures,” said Dr. Jo Shaw, rhino co-ordinator with the South Africa chapter of WWF.

“There is also an urgent need to work closely with countries which are transit routes for illicit rhino horn, specifically Mozambique,” said Dr. Shaw.

Two Vietnamese men were detained in separate incidents earlier this month in Vietnam and Thailand for smuggling rhino horns, which were believed to have been exported from Mozambique.

Both Mozambique and Vietnam have been given failing grades by WWF’s Wildlife Crime Scorecard for failing to enforce laws meant to protect rhinos.

The TRAFFIC report explains that all animals alive today of the southern subspecies of White Rhinoceros Ceratotherium simum simum originate from a remnant population of 20 to 50 animals that have been protected in South Africa’s Hluhluwe-iMfolozi Game Reserve since 1895.

South Africa now conserves 18,800 White Rhinos, which represents nearly 95 percent of Africa’s total White Rhino population.

“The remarkable recovery of the Southern White Rhino via Natal Parks Board’s “Operation Rhino,” which pioneered wildlife translocation and other important management strategies, remains one of the world’s greatest conservation triumphs,” write Shaw and Milliken.

The report credits the country’s private sector who account for a growing proportion of the national White Rhino population. Estimates from 2010 indicate that approximately 25 percent of all White Rhinos in South Africa are privately owned.

The Southern White Rhino is now listed in the IUCN Red List’s Near Threatened category and, although conservation dependent, the subspecies is no longer regarded as a threatened or endangered species.

But Africa’s other rhino species, the Black Rhinoceros Diceros bicornis, has been nearly wiped out. The estimated 100,000 Black Rhinos in Africa in 1960, before the first catastrophic rhino poaching crisis, were reduced to just 2,410 animals by 1995, the report explains.

Since then, numbers have more than doubled to 4,880 animals in 2010, but this species is still listed as Critically Endangered in the IUCN Red List.

In South Africa, Black Rhino numbers have shown a steady increase since the 1980s. South Africa now conserves an estimated 1,915 Black Rhinos – more than any other range state – and nearly 40 percent of all wild Black Rhinos alive today. Again, the private sector has played a major role in Black Rhino conservation, holding approximately 22 percent of South Africa’s current population.

“But the country’s superlative conservation record of more than a century is under threat,” write Shaw and Milliken.

They recommend that South Africa ensure that those arrested for rhino crimes are prosecuted and punished.

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See Also:


http://sg.news.yahoo.com/kenyan-officials-impound-two-tonnes-ivory-police-185942068.html


http://www.bloodyivory.org

HONGKONG AIRLINES ACCUSED OF PROFITING FROM ANIMAL CRUELTY! THEY FLY LIVE DOLPHINS FROM JAPAN TO VIETNAM!


 
 
    http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/hkedition/2012-02/22/content_14662541.htm

    Updated: 2012-02-22 07:09
    By Simon Parry (HK Edition)

    Hongkong Airlines has been accused of profiting from animal cruelty by
    striking a HK$850,000 deal to fly live dolphins from Japan to Vietnam. Simon
    Parry and Alex Hofford report on a controversy that has emotions running sky
    high.

    Five dolphins on board a Hongkong Airlines cargo flight from Osaka in Japan
    to Hanoi in Vietnam on Jan 16, a journey that generated HK$850,000 revenue
    and accusations of animal cruelty against the airline.

    The memo circulated to Hongkong Airlines staff trumpeting the success of the
    dolphin transfer and the money it generated for the airline. The memo has
    infuriated animal welfare groups. Photos by Red Door News, Hong Kong

    (HK Edition 02/22/2012 page4)

    (JP) Sad and Lonely Dolphins
    Posted by: “Dr John Wedderburnjwed@hkstar.com
    Tue Feb 21, 2012 6:41 pm (PST)

    Written by Megan Drake

    Two sad and lonely dolphins – appropriately named Sad and Lonely – were sold
    to the Taiji Whale Museum located only a short distance from the infamous
    cove in which they were captured. Sad and Lonely are on display in the
    museum lobby in a tiny tank. It is believed to be the world’s smallest
    dolphin tank.

    Ric O’Barry – a long time dolphin advocate – has made a video of the two
    dolphins living in misery at the Taiji Whale Museum. Look at the
    ridiculously tiny tank these spotted dolphins are forced to live in. They
    are totally enclosed with no fresh air, sunshine or sea water.

    Video:

    “No facility can adequately simulate the vast ocean or provide for a
    dolphin’s needs. No captive program – no matter how large, well regulated,
    well funded, or well intentioned – can make a case for meeting a dolphin’s
    complex behavioral needs and no standard set by a government can be called
    sufficient.”

    What You Can Do:

A Care2 petition
    (

http://www.thepetitionsite.com/10/shut-down-the-smallest-dolphin-tank-in-th

    e-world/ ) written by the Earth Island Institute is calling for removal of
    the two dolphins named Sad and Lonely. Consider signing for this cause.

    Another petition is still active and has over 400,000 signatures.
   

http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/724/210/624/?z00m=19883718

The Taiji Whale Museum is a member of the Japanese Association of Zoos and Aquariums (JAZA), which is a member of the World Association of Zoos and
    Aquariums (WAZA.) The Switzerland based WAZA is responsible for ethical
    standards of its members. Please contact them to ask they let Sad and Lonely be moved to – at the very least – an outside enclosure with sea water.

    You can submit comments on their website
    (

http://www.waza.org/en/site/contact-us-1257966668
) or email them directly at secretariat@waza.org .

        Re: (JP) Sad and Lonely Dolphins
    Posted by: “Shubhobroto Ghosh” journalistandanimals@gmail.com
    Wed Feb 22, 2012 12:30 am (PST)


    Maybe of some relevance, yesterday The Guardian.

    Whales and dolphins ‘should have legal rights’

    Campaign for intelligent marine mammals to have right to life, which would
    protect them from hunters and captivity

    – Ian Sample <
http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/iansample
>
    – The Guardian <
http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian
>, Tuesday 21
    February 2012
    -

    <
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/feb/21/whales-dolphins-legal-rights#history-link-box
>

    Fishermen drive bottle-nose dolphins into a net during their annual hunt
    off Taiji, Japan. Photograph: Kyodo News/AP

    Campaigners who believe that dolphins and
    whales<
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/whales
>should be granted
    rights on account of their intelligence are to push for
    the animals <
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/animals
> to be protected
    under international law.

    A group of scientists and ethicists argues there is sufficient evidence
    of the marine mammals’ intelligence, self-awareness and complex behaviour
    to enshrine their rights in legislation.

    Under the declaration of rights for cetaceans, a term that includes
    dolphins, whales and porpoises, the animals would be protected as
    “non-human persons” and have a legally enforceable right to life.

    If incorporated into law, the declaration would bring legal force to
    bear on whale hunters, and marine parks, aquariums and other entertainment
    venues would be barred from keeping dolphins, whales or porpoises in
    captivity.

    “We’re saying the science has shown that individuality, consciousness
    and self-awareness are no longer unique human properties. That poses all
    kinds of challenges,” said Tom White, director of the Centre for Ethics and
    Business at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles.

    “Dolphins are non-human persons. A person needs to be an individual. And
    if individuals count, then the deliberate killing of individuals of this
    sort is ethically the equivalent of deliberately killing a human being. The
    captivity of beings of this sort, particularly in conditions that would not
    allow for a decent life, is ethically unacceptable, and commercial whaling
    is ethically unacceptable,” White said.

    The group spoke at the annual meeting in Vancouver of the American
    Association for the Advancement of Science, to raise support for the
    declaration among scientists and the visiting public. The 10-point
    declaration sets out a framework to protect cetaceans’ “life, liberty and
    wellbeing”, including rights to freedom of movement and residence in their
    natural environment, and protection against “disruption of their cultures”.

    “The next step is taking the science and advocating for law in different
    places, from a regional point of view, from a national point of view, and
    eventually from a multinational and international view,” said Chris
    Butler-Stroud of the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society.

    Decades of research on cetaceans, and dolphins in particular, has
    revealed that their brains, while markedly different from humans, are
    large, complex and capable of sophisticated behaviour. Observations of
    dolphins have shown that they can recognise themselves, use tools and
    understand symbols and abstract concepts.

    In 2001, Lori Marino of Emory University in Atlanta, who is promoting
    the declaration, tested whether dolphins recognised
    themselves<
http://www.pnas.org/content/98/10/5937.full
>by drawing
    temporary marks on different parts of their bodies and watching
    them check the mark by swimming up to an immersed mirror. “When we did that
    with two dolphins they passed with flying colours,” she said.

    Orcas off Patagonia displayed a seemingly extraordinary act when an aged
    member of the group suffered jaw damage and could no longer eat properly.
    The whale’s companions kept the animal alive by feeding it. “The animal, we
    would say, was past its sell-by date, an older creature. They must have
    conceptualised that if it wasn’t fed, something would have happened to it,
    and they were able to work out what was needed to keep it alive,” said
    Butler-Stroud.

    At the Institute for Marine Mammal Studies in Mississippi, a dolphin
    named Kelly outwitted its human keepers and passed on some of its tricks to
    its offspring. Dolphins at the centre were rewarded with fish if they
    collected litter from their tanks and carried it in their mouths to the
    staff but Kelly found a weakness in the scheme. When people dropped paper
    into her tank, she hid it under a rock on the bottom. When a keeper next
    approached, she swam down and tore a small piece off, and returned to the
    surface to claim her reward. She worked out that a small piece of paper
    earned the same reward as a big piece, and so maximised her meals.

    Then one day, Kelly managed to grab a gull that flew into the tank. When
    she delivered it to her keepers, she got an especially large fish reward.
    The next time Kelly was fed she hid the fish at the bottom of the pool, and
    later brought it to the surface to lure more gulls into the pool. The
    strategy proved so successful that she taught her offspring, who went on to
    teach others.

    Though much of the declaration is intended to bring pressure on whaling
    nations and venues that keep cetaceans in captivity, the document has major
    implications for conservation programmes and environmental assessments that
    impinge on communities of dolphins, whales and other cetaceans.

    As an early step, the special rights for cetaceans are being considered
    by the UN as part of its convention on migratory species, which aims to
    protect migrating species over their entire ranges.

    Enshrining the rights in law could be some time, though. “If we are
    lucky it could take 10 years,” said White. “We are at the stage of climate
    scientists 20 years ago. This is the first step.”

   
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/feb/21/whales-dolphins-legal-rights

 

 

 
 

Bears Harvested by Chinese for Bile Commit Suicide SHOCKING GRIEVING


Bears harvested by Chinese for bile ‘commit suicide’
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2095904/Bears-held-harvest-bile-going-hunger-strikes-way-escape-captivity.html
 

The gallbladder and the bile ducts. Also calle...

Image via Wikipedia

 

Elephant in Circus in Vietnam: Lifelong Chained


Map of Vietnam, scalable format

Image via Wikipedia

Gequälter Elefant im Zirkus in Vietnam! Tierhaltungsverbot im Zirkus weltweit dringend erforderlich!
Elefanten in tierquälerischen Zirkus-Haltungen leiden!
http://nachrichten.t-online.de/zirkuselefant-trampelt-elfjaehriges-maedchen-in-vietnam-zu-tode/id_50671434/index

Elephant in circus in vietnam – in chains!

And no wonder Elephants

get wild and hurt people

Recently I read Jason Hribal´s book  Fear of the Animal Planet. It tells exactly what is happening here!