LONDON & WASHINGTON, DC:
The poaching of rhinos in South Africa has increased by more than
three rhinos a week on average since Environmental Minister Edna Molewa
called for a legal international trade in rhino horn, according to
analysis by the non-profit Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA).
From January 1 to March 13,
2013,
an average of 15.36 rhinos were poached each week in South Africa. On
March 14, Minister
Molewa revealed her support at the meeting of the member nations of the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) in
Bangkok, Thailand, for a legal international rhino horn trade. CITES has
long banned such a trade.
Since the Minister’s announcement, a weekly average of 18.6 rhinos were poached between March 14 and September 19,
totaling 505 rhinos. Today the 2013 total has now reached a grim new
world record of 663 animals, just five short of South Africa’s 2012
record total of 668 poached rhinos. Kenya and India have also reported
increased numbers of their rhinos poached this year.
The
EIA analysis is released to coincide with Sunday’s World Rhino Day
which celebrates the five remaining rhino species, all of which are
threatened by poaching to meet demand for
their horns.
EIA
President Allan Thornton said: “South Africa is stimulating an
ever-increasing and unsustainable demand for rhino horn in Vietnam,
China and other countries that is fuelling the
rhino poaching epidemic. South Africa’s policy signal to the global
marketplace that rhino horn is a smart investment commodity is
unleashing a tsunami of destruction on South Africa’s rhinos.”
Fraudulent
claims spread by Vietnamese crime syndicates and Government officials
promoting rhino horn as a cure for cancer and other ailments have caused
skyrocketing prices for
rhino horn, while corrupt Vietnamese diplomatic officials implicated in
illegal rhino horn trade in South Africa have gone unpunished. Alarming
results from a recent consumer survey in Vietnam indicate that the
potential rhino horn consumer base in Vietnam is three times the current level.
“Rhinos
are already being slaughtered at an unsustainable rate to feed the
demand for an unsubstantiated ‘medicine’ in Vietnam,” said Mary Rice,
Executive Director of EIA’s London
office.
“Powerful
commercial interests in South Africa are seeking to cash in on their
stockpiled horn at the expense of the conservation and survival of South
Africa’s rhinos. Legalising
rhino horn trade will reward the criminal kingpins behind the poaching,
pushing rhinos inside and outside of South Africa ever closer to
extinction.”
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