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Leopard pelt trader gets off scot-free
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Leopard pelt trader gets off scot-free
FIONA MACLEOD - Feb 11 2011 10:47


Conservationists are infuriated that a KwaZulu-Natal muti trader caught in possession of 150 leopard pelts has been let off the hook. Figures indicate that, at most, 450 of the endangered cats are left in the province.

And, after it emerged that the trader supplies ceremonial regalia to members of the Shembe church, differences have emerged over who is entitled to wear the spotted skins. Mlungu Ngubane was charged with 252 offences under the KwaZulu-Natal Nature Conservation Ordinance after police raided his Maputaland home in August 2008.

In addition to 92 leopard skins, they said they found parts of several other protected game species and a container of Temik, a toxic pesticide they believed was used to kill wildlife.

This was not Ngubane's first run-in with the law. In late 2007 he was convicted of the illegal possession of 58 leopard skins and was given a suspended sentence and community service. When his case came to court in late January after several delays, magistrate Paul David ruled the police did not have a warrant to search his premises and threw it out.

Conservation NGOs that became aware of the ruling only this week said it was based on a flimsy technicality. They suspected political pressure because Ngubane tailors leopard skins into the traditional outfits worn by Shembe believers.

"After his first conviction, the church asked that Ngubane be allowed to do community service rather than go to jail on condition that he was not caught again. He continued trading in spite of this," said Rynette Coetzee, of the Endangered Wildlife Trust's law and policy programme.

The Shembes
Tristan Dickerson, a scientist working with the Munyawana Leopard Project in northern KwaZulu-Natal, pointed out that leopards are listed as threatened and are protected under Appendix I of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.

Asked to do DNA analysis on Ngubane's skins, he discovered they were going to the Shembes. He attended several Shembe events, where he saw more than 2 000 members wearing real leopard skins.

"Leopard skin represents royalty and everyone wants to feel like royalty," said Bandile Mkhize, the chief executive of the regional authority, Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife. "Before we know it, there won't be any animals left. We can't allow a free-for-all."


Kings and chiefs, including President Jacob Zuma, were required to follow certain procedures and obtain permits if they wanted to wear the pelts of protected species, Mkhize said. His organisation had issued 15 such permits for a ceremony last December.

But although Zulu royalty appeared happy to follow the rules -- King Goodwill Zwelethini gets the crane feathers for his headdress from conservation organisations -- Ngubane was supplying the Shembes illegally. "He certainly didn't get any permits from us," said Mkhize.

A ceremonial outfit made of leopard skin, which includes an apron, headdress and armbands, costs more than R6 000. Zulu royal spokesperson Prince Mbonisi said the leopard skins date back to the 1960s and it is impossible to source new ones. "There are no markets where you can buy leopard skins. Ask the Shembe; they wear them all the time," he said.

Pointing fingers
Presidential spokesperson Zanele Mngadi could not say where the Zuma household sources ceremonial leopard regalia, saying that they could be fake. She failed to answer further questions.

Enoch Mthembu, the spokesperson for the Shembe church, saw nothing wrong with Ngubane supplying church members. "God gave us the environment and control over the animals. We wear leopard skins to worship God, not to enrich ourselves," he said.

The Shembes wear leopard regalia for dancing ceremonies, not for traditional purposes in the manner of Zulu nobility, he said. "It's wrong to point fingers at the Shembe; this is part of our culture."

The religion, with an estimated 4,5-million followers, was based on reverence for nature and used various animal skins for positive, peaceful purposes, Mthembu said. They were sourced from all over the continent.

Asked about the risk that leopards could become extinct, Mthembu replied that stock owners in Port Elizabeth were complaining the cats were killing their livestock.


Kathi

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708-425-3552

"The world is a book, and those who do not travel read only one page."
 
Posts: 9536 | Location: Chicago | Registered: 23 July 2003Reply With Quote
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Wow - This is a real shame, especially since he got off the charge and is most likely out there still up to his old tricks. This guy makes the OoA bunch look like school kids. Wink

Larry Sellers
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Posts: 3460 | Location: Jemez Mountains, New Mexico | Registered: 09 February 2006Reply With Quote
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The ANC is not about to cross 4.5 million voters, and they don't give a damn if the Shembe kill every leopard in South Africa.

I was told at the African Hunting Gazette show in Atlanta that when the annual leopard permits were drawn, the first name out of the basket was... Dawie Groenewald.

It was a random drawing, so it would have been hard to rig it.


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~ Alan

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Posts: 1114 | Location: Georgia | Registered: 09 March 2001Reply With Quote
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wanna bet??


Vote Trump- Putin’s best friend…
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Posts: 13619 | Location: Georgia | Registered: 28 October 2006Reply With Quote
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NO lol


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
 
Posts: 1114 | Location: Georgia | Registered: 09 March 2001Reply With Quote
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Time to genetically engineer a pig or cow to have a leopard skin - then business would be a boomin'!


"Evil is powerless if the good are unafraid" -- Ronald Reagan

"Ignorance of The People gives strength to totalitarians."

Want to make just about anything work better? Keep the government as far away from it as possible, then step back and behold the wonderment and goodness.
 
Posts: 3083 | Location: Austin, Texas | Registered: 05 April 2006Reply With Quote
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During the season last year, a poacher was caught in the Save Conservancy with a dead leopard in his bag. he was fined $25 by the police and sent on his way. When asked why he was not fined in accordance with the Parks act for killing a female leopard, the Policeman merely smiled and said "ah those rules are not for black people"

True story that makes you despair on the future of wildlife in Africa!!
 
Posts: 459 | Location: Zimbabwe | Registered: 11 May 2010Reply With Quote
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zimFrosty - This type of slap on the wrist penalty for wildlife game law breaking is really the crux of what's wrong in most of Africa today. It's not limited only to Africa however, here in New Mexico up until about three years ago the same "buddy system" was common place here as well. Things have changed, with large fines, confiscation of vehicles and equipment and loss of hunting privileges for many years is now in place and WORKING by the way.

If things are ever going to change in Africa concerning this very large problem, Courts, local law enforcement,etc. will have to step up and deal out penalties that have some significance. Probably will never happen, but that's what it will take to turn the tide.

Larry Sellers
SCI Life Member


quote:
Originally posted by zimFrosty:
During the season last year, a poacher was caught in the Save Conservancy with a dead leopard in his bag. he was fined $25 by the police and sent on his way. When asked why he was not fined in accordance with the Parks act for killing a female leopard, the Policeman merely smiled and said "ah those rules are not for black people"

True story that makes you despair on the future of wildlife in Africa!!
 
Posts: 3460 | Location: Jemez Mountains, New Mexico | Registered: 09 February 2006Reply With Quote
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Posts: 459 | Location: Zimbabwe | Registered: 11 May 2010Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by Larry Sellers:
...here in New Mexico up until about three years ago the same "buddy system" was common place here as well. Things have changed...
[/QUOTE]

I wouldn't bet my life on that! Field descretion by officials is a fact of life everywhere in every facet of law enforcement. It is arguably a necessary tool as not every "violation" is black and white (no pun intended). However after twenty-six years in the business I'd guess that "officer discretion" is misused more often than judiciously applied as intended.


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Posts: 777 | Location: United States | Registered: 06 March 2006Reply With Quote
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OUPA Talk about an understatement!
 
Posts: 99 | Registered: 01 August 2010Reply With Quote
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