More
than 1,000 rhinos poached in South Africa last year: government
Send a link to a friend
[January 18, 2014]
By Ed Stoddard
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) — More than 1,000
rhinos were poached for their horns in South Africa in 2013, a record
number and an increase of over 50 percent from the previous year, the
country's department of environmental affairs said on Friday.
|
Rhino hunting is driven by soaring demand in newly affluent Asian
countries such as Vietnam and China, where the animal's horns are
prized as a key ingredient in traditional medicine.
Rhino horn has a street value of more than $65,000 a kg in Asia,
conservation groups say, making it more valuable than platinum, gold
or cocaine.
The data is sure to ring conservation alarm bells about a downward
population spiral in a country that is home to almost all of Africa
and the world's rhinos, and it may bring renewed pressure on the
government to do something to halt the slayings.
In 2013, 1,004 of the massive animals were illegally killed in South
Africa, compared with 668 the previous year and 448 in 2011.
Most of the killings are taking place in South Africa's flagship
Kruger National Park, which lost 606 rhinos last year and 425 in
2012.
The park service has been turning its rangers into soldiers, using
drones to patrol airspace and sending out crack units by helicopter
when suspected poachers are sighted.
The Kruger borders impoverished Mozambique, where most of the
poachers are believed to be drawn from. Criminal syndicates promise
cash to poor and unemployed rural villagers willing to take the risk
of hunting down the animals.
[to top of second column] |
"A total of 37 rhino have been poached since the start of 2014," the
department of environmental affairs said.
South Africa's rhino population totals around 20,000.
Elsewhere in Africa, elephants are being poached at an alarming rate
for their ivory, which is used for carvings and has been valued for
millennia for its color and texture.
The surging demand for ivory also mostly comes from rapidly growing
Asian economies.
(Editing by Hugh Lawson)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|