National Parks slammed for involvement in elephant deaths
By Alex Bell
20 February 2012
Zimbabwe’s National Parks Authority has been slammed for its involvement in
recent elephant killings, after it emerged that Parks staff killed three of
the animals within a conservancy last week.
The employees from Chipinda Pools went to Chiredzi River Conservancy last
Thursday and shot three elephants, including two lactating cows and one
young bull. It brings to seven the number of elephants killed in the
Conservancy in the past 35 days, where the elephant numbers are dwindling.
According to Johnny Rodrigues, the chairman of the Zimbabwe Conservation
Task Force (ZCTF), the Park staff are working with illegal land invaders,
who have all but taken over the Chiredzi River Conservancy. He explained
that the invaders are deliberately trying to get rid of the wildlife there,
to make way for farming.
“The settlers claimed that the animals had attacked them and instead of
investigating these claims, the Parks staff just went in and shot them,”
Rodrigues said, blaming ‘criminal elements’ within the Parks Authority.
The Parks employees removed the ivory from the dead animals and left the
land invaders to remove the meat from the carcasses. Rodrigues said the ZCTF
is still trying to track down where the ivory has gone.
Rodrigues meanwhile had strong criticism for National Parks, saying: “It
appears that National Parks headquarters in Harare are not aware of what
their counterparts are doing in the Lowveld and it is of great concern that
the guardians of our wildlife are participating in this criminal activity.”
Rodrigues meanwhile said the increasing demand for ivory and the complete
lack of the rule of law in Zimbabwe is fuelling this kind of assisted
poaching, with detrimental affects on the elephant population.
“Parks insists that there is an abundance of elephant in Zimbabwe, but this
just isn’t true. In Chiredzi alone there were 72 elephants, now there are
just 40,” Rodrigues said.
The demand for ivory has seen poaching levels across Africa soar in recent
weeks. According to the Reuters news agency, Cameroon’s elephant population
has been seriously hit, with poachers killing more than 200 elephants in
just six weeks.
The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) reportedly called the
killings a “massacre’ that has “no comparison to those of the preceding
years.” Meanwhile, the conservation group TRAFFIC has warned of a surge in
elephant poaching in Africa to meet Asian demand for tusks.