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New Fight against Rhino Poaching-Hit Customers

Posted: Thu Sep 09, 2010 6:27 pm
by Vikram
In a desperate attempt to stem the rampant poaching of Rhinos, some farmers are taking drastic measures of poisoning the horns of the Rhinos.If the poisoned horn of a poached Rhino is consumed, the consumer may die! :shock: This should encourage at least some of the customers to look at other alternatives. :wink:

Read on. Do share what you think of it.


http://www.iol.co.za/news/south-africa/ ... e-1.670604

'Poison rhino horns so consumers die'
July 23 2010 at 11:32am

AFP
Under threat: Vuma, a calf of a rhino cow, killed by poachers for her horn - is being cared for by game reserve employees at the Rhino and Lion Nature Reserve. Photo: Sapa
Helicopters, machine guns, bullet-proof vests, R250 000 night-vision binoculars, prescription tranquillisers, axes, saws - these are all tools of the grizzly trade in rhino horns.

And one man is prepared to go to extreme lengths to stop it.

Ed Hern, owner of the Rhino and Lion Park near Krugersdorp, west of Johannesburg, believes poisoning the horns of rhinos will result in consumers of the product falling ill or dying and knock the demand for this illegal product hard.

"We need to try poisoning the horns with something like cyanide so when someone uses it for medicine they will die. I have started testing with a vet," he said.

South African rhino owners are becoming increasingly desperate as the country is being targeted by hi-tech rhino poaching syndicates, believed to be working with industry insiders, to feed the demand for rhino horn in Vietnam and China.

"What they are doing is illegal. We need to stop this once and for all."

Hern is at his wits end after recently accepting yet another orphaned rhino calf onto his farm after its mother was poached.

In the last six months at least 124 rhinos have been poached in South Africa, a vast increase on the 122 killed over the duration of 2009, according to SA National Parks.

Hern said with the help of a local vet he has been injecting small amounts of poison into the horn of one of his rhinos to see if it will have any adverse effects on the animal.

"The horn is made of hair, there is no blood flow through it and so far we have not seen any effects. But if someone used the horn as medicine they would get very sick or die.

"We're not waiting to see if the rhino dies. The signs we're looking for are loss of condition or if it stops eating. Then we would stop."

He would not say what poison they have used or reveal the vet's name.

"I have even consulted lawyers to see what would happen if we did this. They tell me I would get into a lot of trouble."

Faan Coetzee, of the Endangered Wildlife Trust, says it would be a criminal offence to poison horns.

"If someone died you could be arrested for murder. We do not think this is a solution.

Japie Mostert, manager at the Krugersdorp game reserve where the last rhino was poached on July 14, leaving behind an orphaned nine-month-old calf, said all rhino breeders were getting desperate, but he was not ready to resort to that kind of action.

"All rhino breeders feel the same way , but is it the right way?"

According to Coetzee the horn is a fundamental ingredient in traditional medicines in China and Vietnam, where "medicine is like religion to them".

Rhino horn has been extensively analysed and found to contain no medicinal properties. It is ground into a powder, added to liquids or sprinkled over food and is incorrectly believed to treat impotency, fever, pain, arthritis and even devil possession.

And demand for the product is closer to home than we think, according to the traditional Healers' Organisation for Africa (THO).

"Yes, rhino horns are used in impotency cases for sure, however, I am not sure who in South Africa from our healers use it," said the organisation's co-ordinator Phephsile Maseko.

"To curb the innocent killings of rhinos the THO in 1997 started up a natural resources and biodiversity management programme where healers were trained on the importance of respecting such animals, and unfortunately we could not sustain the programme as we lacked funding."

Rhino breeders all agree that the legal route of stopping rhino poaching would be to step up security at all game parks, encourage vigilance from citizens, and boost law enforcement.

According to Coetzee: "We need better patrolling and the government needs to focus more on catching the syndicates, the top guys."

Said Dr David Mabunda, Sanparks chief executive officer: "Poachers and their rich bosses sitting in air-conditioned luxury homes in the leafy suburbs of our metropolitan cities must know we are after them. We will hunt them in the bushes, in the cities, airports and internationally."

He asked that people report low-flying Robinson R44 helicopters with concealed registration numbers which are widely used in rhino poaching.

An angry Hern, who has adopted at least five orphaned rhino calves over the past few years, says: "If they try to poach my rhinos I will shoot them, these will shoot you dead, and I will shoot a helicopter out of the sky if it is flying low over my farm at night." he said.

He pays around R30,000 to a private security company each month to sit on koppies on his farm and watch his rhinos. Every guard has night vision binoculars.

"But how do these compare to the kind of binoculars that these syndicates have, that can see a rhino at night from 4km away and cost a quarter-of-a-million rand? No game park can afford that."

One of the rhinos under Hern's watchful care is Vuma, the orphaned calf born at the Krugersdorp game reserve about 10 months ago.

He has been put in an enclosure with two other orphaned calves, but after three weeks at the park still jumps at the approach of any humans. He nervously follows his companions around, but refuses to feed from the bottle of formula milk offered to him.

He lets out a high-pitched whine and his ears flick to and fro, listening to the sounds around him. Three weeks ago the only sound in his world was that of his now-dead mother.
Best-
Vikram

Re: New Fight against Rhino Poaching-Hit Customers

Posted: Thu Sep 09, 2010 6:40 pm
by dev
Sounds like a plan, don't think we can do it in our land though. But an ingenious solution non-the less.

Re: New Fight against Rhino Poaching-Hit Customers

Posted: Thu Sep 09, 2010 8:53 pm
by nagarifle
all fair in war an love, 8)

its a poaching war and love of animals, fair game i say, let the buyers beware.

Re: New Fight against Rhino Poaching-Hit Customers

Posted: Fri Sep 10, 2010 3:48 am
by Vikram
I do wish that they should find a similar way to deal with the tiger products consumers. :twisted:

Re: New Fight against Rhino Poaching-Hit Customers

Posted: Fri Sep 10, 2010 8:59 am
by timmy
I'm not going to bother going into my reasoning, but would like to note:

This poaching of rhinos (or tigers, or whales) is a very bad thing, and it ought to be dealt with using measures strong enough to get the practices to stop, whatever those practices might need to be.

These problems, just like drugs and other trade contraband, normally focus on the people who are doing the smuggling/poaching/selling, or even prostitution, for that matter. This is wrong. I agree these folks need to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and I basically agree with the farmer who threatens to shoot anyone flying over or entering his land at night. I don't think it is correct to expect these farmers to forebear defending themselves and give armed thieves the benefit of the doubt.

However, I believe most of the problem isn't related to the people who traffic in these illegal practices: it is the people who are willing to buy this stuff that cause the problem. As long as there are people to pay for illegal materials of any kind, there will always be someone who will go through whatever is needed to make that money.

You can judge a society's seriousness about ending these sorts of pernicious practices by how they punish the buyers. If the onus of punishment falls on the sellers, you can be sure that society is blaming others for their own vices. Such nations aren't at all serious about actually doing something about their problems, they just want to continue doing what they want and blame someone else to escape scrutiny.

I believe that this is the case with the sale of rhino horns and tiger parts in China and elsewhere, the trade in whale meat in Japan, and the trade in drugs to the USA -- none of these nations will take responsibility for their citizens' unlawful behavior, while all the time claiming to be nations of law.

Without going into this to an unnecessary degree, I would subscribe to removing these sorts of proclivities from our gene pool... permanently.

Re: New Fight against Rhino Poaching-Hit Customers

Posted: Fri Sep 10, 2010 1:43 pm
by shooter
believe most of the problem isn't related to the people who traffic in these illegal practices: it is the people who are willing to buy this stuff that cause the problem.

A simple lab kit that can be purchased for a few dollars can neutralise cyanide. all it takes is one death to alert the oachers to this and then they start treating the horns.

it is the consumer that is responsible. Unfortunately only after the species is gone do people realise its value and also realise they can do without the stuff.