Zimbabwe: Elephant Death Tolls Climbs to 81 After Cyanide Poisoning

Serra Moz

Sealiner
More than 80 elephants have died as a result of cyanide poisoning at the Hwange National Park, in what is being described as a serious crisis for the park.
Nine suspected members of a poaching syndicate have been arrested since the first of the elephant carcasses were discovered late last month. The carcasses were discovered after national parks authorities teamed up with police to track suspected poachers, after hearing gunfire in the park.
Investigations by the police resulted in the grisly discovery of the elephants, with their tusks removed. Further investigations led the police to nearby Mafu homestead, where six suspected members of the poaching gang were arrested and 17 elephant tusks were recovered.
According to authorities, the poaching syndicate laced salt licks with cyanide and placed the salt at main water sources where the Hwange elephants drink.
Since then, a large scale operation has been launched resulting in three more arrests and the discovery of even more elephants remains.
Johnny Rodrigues, the chairman of the Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force (ZCTF) said the situation is "very serious." He told SW Radio Africa that greed and corruption was to blame for allowing poaching to reach such serious levels.
"The repercussions are just so big. All the carnivores in the park like your lions, your leopards, the birds, they will all have perished too from eating the elephant meat," Rodrigues said.
He added: "The situation is just going to get worse and something needs to be done to stop the carnage."
Meanwhile, a high level government delegation made another journey to Hwange this weekend, the second visit in a week, to evaluate the situation. The new Minister of Environment Savior Kasukuwere once again declared a "war" against poaching.
"We declare zero tolerance to poaching. We must put a stop to this. We cannot continue with this non-sense," state media quoted Kasukuwere as saying.
Tourism and Hospitality Minister Walter Mzembi, who accompanied Kasukuwere to Hwange, described the poisoning as case as "murder" of Zimbabwe's wildlife and pledged to take the fight an international level.
More on This Sanctions, Untold Story Behind the Hwange Ecological Disaster
THE ecological disaster in Hwange National Park, where over 81 elephants and an indeterminate number of other animals … see more »
 

Serra Moz

Sealiner
Zim elephant poachers jailed!!!!!!

Harare - A Zimbabwe court on Wednesday sentenced three poachers to at least 15 years in prison each for poisoning and killing 81 elephants, state radio reported.

A provincial magistrate sentenced 25-year-old Diyane Tshuma to 16 years in prison for poisoning elephants with cyanide at in Hwange National Park, in the west of Zimbabwe, Spot FM reported.

His co-accused Robert Maphosa, 42, and Thabani Zondo, 24, were each sentenced to 15 years.

“The parks and wildlife management authority has hailed the sentences saying they will be a deterrent to would-be poachers,” Spot FM reported.

Tshuma was ordered to pay $600 000 (R5.93 million) to the Zimbabwe Wildlife and Parks Authority for killing the animals, while Zondo must pay $200 000 (R1.98 million) by the end of the year.

Elephant's tusks are highly sought after for Asia's ivory trade.

The three were among nine people arrested on suspicion of poisoning watering holes in the game park.

However, Jerry Gotora, chairman of the Zimbabwe parks department board of directors on Tuesday said the poison had been “put at places where elephants graze, not in water”.

Two years ago nine elephants, five lions and two buffalo died from cyanide poisoning in Hwange National Park.

Just 50 rangers patrol the 14 650-square kilometre (5 660-square mile) park, and wildlife authorities say 10 times that number are needed.

There are more than 120 000 elephants living in Zimbabwe's national parks.
 

BTTB

Senior Member
Shocking, I am at a loss for words on what to say about these people, nothing can equate to their few years in jail to the carnage they have sown on unsuspecting animals.
 
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