Voice
of America News.Com
By Howard Lesser
Washington, DC
May 2, 2008
Original
Article
Wildlife
Direct's Emmanuel de Morode - Download
(MP3)
An upsurge of elephant poaching in the Democratic
Republic of Congo has resulted in the killing
of 14 elephants in the past two weeks by militias,
the military, and local villagers. Four were
felled by an ex-Rwandan Hutu FDLR militia, formerly
known as Interahamwe. Three elephants were murdered
by the local Mai-Mai militia (PARECO), five by
the Congolese military (FARDC), and two by local
villagers. From eastern Congo’s Virunga
National Park where the slaughter occurred, Emmanuel
de Morode, who heads the conservation group Wildlife
Direct, says the killing frenzy was also encouraged
by a readily available pool of weapons.
“There’s a widespread availability
of automatic rifles that make it easy to kill
wildlife. But on top of that, there’s been
an increased incentive in demand for ivory,” says
de Morode.
The Belgian anthropologist has spearheaded efforts
to restrain the bushmeat trade in eastern Congo
since 1993, helping safeguard Virunga’s
renowned gorillas and also the west African gorilla
population of Gabon. De Morode says the latest
elephant deaths are part of a widespread killing-for-profit
campaign across the Congo Basin.
“There’s a belief that the ivory
market is going to open up. As a result, certain
groups are going in to kill elephants. This isn’t
limited to Virunga. It’s believed to be
pretty widespread across the Congo Basin. There’s
been a massive reduction reported in (Congo’s)
Garamba National Park in the last few years.
And this is a park that recently had 12-thousand
elephants and is now estimated to have less than
half of that number,” he says.
Economically, the brutality is being prompted
by a liberalization of the world’s ivory
trade. De Morode says the killings also coincide
with South Africa’s lifting this week of
a 13-year moratorium on elephant culling.
“As soon as there’s a sense that
that ban on the international trade of ivory
is going to be lifted, even before it actually
happens, there’s an upsurge in the killing
of elephants,” he notes.
In addition, a rising Chinese presence in the
region is stimulating the market. The Wildlife
Direct CEO says the pursuit of ivory is just
one of many African resources which Chinese entrepreneurs
send back to Asia to augment China’s vast
engine of manufactured goods to sell.
“What we’ve found is that with the
increasing commercial activity covering a number
of areas, there are a number of infrastructure
projects that are developing in the Congo Basin,
in particular in the eastern DRC. There are road-building
projects that are run by Chinese companies. And
alongside that, there are a number of commercial
activities, including the purchase of natural
resources for the Chinese market – timber,
wildlife resources, and of course ivory is very
much part of that. And by Chinese entrepreneurs,
there’s a spin-off effect,” he suggests.
While a doubling of South Africa’s elephant
population between 1995 and the presence signals
success for that government’s cooperation
with conservation-driven efforts to slow down
the ivory trade, Emmanuel de Morode says the
debate is still open about whether it is more
important to save the species rather than to
enlarge the world ivory pool.
“That’s one of the great debates
in conservation. There’s no question that
the South Africans have done a remarkable job
in protecting their elephants and managing their
wildlife population. But at the same time, the
issues are not just to do with South Africa’s
elephants. It’s to do with the species
as a whole. And unfortunately, while one has
to respect the effectiveness of South Africa’s
conservation work, one also has to look at the
species as a whole across the continent. And
when laws are relaxed in South Africa, it has
an impact on the whole elephant population. And
that’s why international conventions and
international laws exist – to ensure that
the safety of the species as a whole is secured,” he
said.
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