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Elephant poachers could be Zambians

Home National Elephant poachers could be Zambians

Windhoek

Following the latest poaching incident in which four elephants were poached on Thursday evening at Kasika Conservancy in the Zambezi Region, preliminary investigations show that the suspects crossed into Zambia and it is therefore assumed that the perpetrators are of Zambian origin.

This was revealed yesterday by the spokesman of the Ministry of Environment and Tourism, Romeo Muyunda, who described the escalation in poaching as unfortunate.

Of the four poached jumbos at Kasika, east of Katima Mulilo, two are bulls and two are cows.
Muyunda confirmed that the ministry’s staff members responded to the incident and found that all the tusks were removed by the poachers.

“So far no arrest has been made, but we are working closely with the Zambian wildlife authorities in an effort to track and find the suspects. Further investigations in the case continue,” Muyunda noted.

The ministry appealed to the general public with information that may lead to the arrest of the suspects or any other suspect of wildlife crime, to contact the nearest police station or the environment ministry offices.

“Poaching is robbing us of valuable resources that might be crucial for our economic development and therefore needs to be stopped as a matter of urgency,” he stated.

Nampa reported that residents who reside close to the conservancy heard gunshots and alerted the police.
Despite Cabinet’s 2014 resolution to allow the country’s security forces to be involved in the fight against poaching and other crimes threatening wildlife, the Ministry of Environment and Tourism has not roped in such forces yet as is the case with neighbouring Botswana where its defence force is deployed strategically around that country’s national parks and shoot poachers on sight.

In 2014, the former Environment and Tourism Minister Uahekua Herunga had announced that Cabinet had granted permission to allow the security forces to be involved in the fight against poaching and other crimes threatening the country’s wildlife.

Of late, the public have been questioning why the Ministry of Environment and Tourism is not requesting the Namibian Defence Force (NDF) to avail some soldiers, whom they say are idle in bases, to national parks to assist with anti-poaching operations.

When approached for comment recently, Muyunda said: “No, we are not considering the deployment of soldiers at the moment.”
However, he said, the ministry has a good working relationship with the NDF and other law enforcement agencies such as the Namibian Police and the Namibia Central Intelligence Services, amongst others, in the fight against poaching.

When asked on the estimates of the rhino population in Namibia, he said that unfortunately the ministry cannot give such information, citing security reasons.

“But from near extinction in the 1960s, Namibia now has the largest free-ranging population of black rhinos in the world,” he noted.
According to him, Namibia’s elephant population is currently between 20 000 – 25 000, with more than 28 elephants killed this year alone.