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Rhino Poaching Reaches Record Level in 2014


FILE- Photo released by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service shows a black rhino male and calf in Mkuze, South Africa. (AP)
FILE- Photo released by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service shows a black rhino male and calf in Mkuze, South Africa. (AP)
Rhino Poaching Reaches Record Level in 2014
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The poaching, or illegal killing, of rhinos in South Africa is growing worse each year. The government recently reported that a record number of rhinos were poached in 2014. The killings continue even though the government has increased efforts to try to stop poachers.

Edna Molewa is South Africa’s environmental issues minister. She spoke to reporters in Pretoria about the record number of killings.

“During 2014, we (are) sad to say this, the number of 1,215 rhinos were killed. This is a rise in the number of poached rhino from 1004 in 2013. This is indeed very worrying.”

That is an increase of 21 percent from 2013, a year which had more rhino killings in South Africa than ever before.

The World Wildlife Fund, or WWF, estimates 20,000 rhinos live in South Africa. That is more than 80 percent of the rhinos in the world. About half of the rhinos in South Africa live in Kruger National Park.

The animals are hunted for their horn. Many people in Asia believe the horn has healing power. But there is no scientific evidence for this belief. The horn is made of keratin. That is the same substance as human hair, fingernails and toenails.

Ms. Molewa said 386 suspected poachers were arrested last year, an increase from the year before. But rhino protection workers say poachers often go unpunished after arrest. South Africa’s legal system is inefficient.

Ms. Molewa said more needs to be done. She said South Africa is taking strong measures to protect rhinos. She said efforts include moving some of the animals to secret places in neighboring countries.

“Now, in the last quarter -- which is last year, 2014 -- 56 rhino have already been moved out of poaching hot spots and translocated from certain areas within the Kruger National Park to what we call an intensive protection zone -- ITZ -- as well as to other, more secure areas. And over and above that, approximately 100 rhinos have been translocated to neighboring states in the SADC region during 2014.”

She said 200 more rhinos will be moved this year.

Jo Shaw is the rhino program manager at the WWF. She spoke to VOA on Skype about the record number of rhino killings last year in South Africa.

“It’s obviously extremely worrying news. We’re, we’re talking about a loss of a hundred rhinos a month, or, or more than three a day. We really need to see strategic, concerted action not just at a national level but internationally.”

She says officials should find the criminal groups responsible for the poaching and punish them.

Conservationists and government officials are to meet in Botswana in March at the Inter-governmental Conference on Illegal Wildlife Trade. They will talk about ways to stop the trade in rhino horns. That may be the only way to stop the killing of rhinos.

I’m Marsha James.

VOA South Africa Correspondent Anita Powell reported this story from Johannesburg. Christopher Cruise wrote it for VOA Learning English. Caty Weaver edited the story.

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Words in This Story

hot spot n. idiom a place where there is much danger or fighting

translocate(d)v. relocate; move

SADC n. acronym for “South African Development Community”

concerted adj. done in a planned and deliberate way usually by several or many people

Do rhinos live in your country? If so, what are officials doing to protect them? We want to hear from you. Write your thoughts in the comments section.

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