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More rhino poacher arrests soon Elise Tempelhoff, Beeld Pretoria - Many, many more people will soon be arrested due to their involvement in rhino poaching, Ken Maggs, member of the SANParks team investigating the crime, said on Tuesday. "I hate to say it, but these are people who are involved in nature conservation. "It's going to turn the game industry upside down and it's going to shock many people. "We have already issued warrants for the arrests. It's going to happen soon," he repeated. He predicted that there would be a significant decrease in incidents of rhino poaching after all the arrests have been made. The biggest problem facing the investigating team, which consists of more than nine units, is "to understand the dynamics of the demand for rhinos", he said. Maggs said that since the start of the year, 112 people have been arrested in connection with rhino poaching. Cheers, ~Alan Cheers, ~ Alan Life Member NRA Life Member SCI email: editorusa(@)africanxmag(dot)com African Expedition Magazine: http://www.africanxmag.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/alan.p.bunn Twitter: http://twitter.com/EditorUSA Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. Life is either a daring adventure or nothing. ~Keller To be persuasive we must be believable; to be believable we must be credible; to be credible we must be truthful. ~ Murrow | ||
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New unit to tackle rhino poaching Pretoria - Water and Environmental Affairs Minister Buyelwa Sonjica announced that a dedicated unit tasked to fight rhino poaching had started operating on Tuesday. Speaking at a summit on rhino poaching in Pretoria, the minister said it worried her that stiffer penalties against poaching did not appear to be having the desired effect of deterring poachers. "Unfortunately the rhino population in South Africa is now being threatened by an upsurge in the illegal killing of rhinos and the leakage of illegally obtained rhino horn stocks into the international illegal trade." She said that so far this year 227 rhinos had been illegally killed and at the current rate more than 300 animals could be killed by poachers by the end of the year. Reaction unit "The establishment of an interim National Wildlife Crime Reaction Unit is aimed at responding to the current spate of wildlife crimes and more specifically the upsurge of rhino poaching and smuggling of rhino horn," she said. The unit would be led by the department of environmental affairs, but would include members from the SA Police Force as well as the National Prosecuting Authority, the South African National Parks and Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife. She said a select team of the SAPF Hawks had also been assigned to focus on rhino poaching activities. Fundisile Mketeni, the department's deputy director general of biodiversity and conservation, said that if the unit proved to be successful it would become a permanent structure in the fight against poaching. Advocate Johan Kruger from the NPA told delegates there were currently 26 rhino poaching cases involving at least 80 accused people before South African courts. He said the NPA was using a variety of tools at its disposal to prosecute poachers. Conviction Not only were poaching laws now being used, but he said the NPA was turning its attention to using other laws to ensure poachers were convicted. He said the NPA was looking at charging poachers with offences such as breaching aviation laws, breaking organised crime laws, corruption, poaching and tax evasion. The NPA would also be using the prevention of organised crime laws in future as most poachers worked in syndicates, even if they were informally set up. Earlier in the day, national police spokesperson Colonel Vishnu Naidoo said 21 people have been arrested in connection with rhino poaching in South Africa in the past three weeks. Eleven people, including two veterinarians, a pilot and a game farmer, all allegedly part of a rhino poaching syndicate, were arrested in Limpopo last month. Kruger said the majority of the foreign nationals apprehended in the rhino poaching syndicates came from Vietnam and China. However, Sonjica ruled out confronting the Vietnam government over the issue. She said South Africa would soon be signing a memorandum of understanding on environment with Vietnam. She said "it won't be confrontation" but rather that rhino poaching would "be raised in the context of diplomacy". - SAPA Cheers, ~ Alan Life Member NRA Life Member SCI email: editorusa(@)africanxmag(dot)com African Expedition Magazine: http://www.africanxmag.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/alan.p.bunn Twitter: http://twitter.com/EditorUSA Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. Life is either a daring adventure or nothing. ~Keller To be persuasive we must be believable; to be believable we must be credible; to be credible we must be truthful. ~ Murrow | |||
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