MINISTER MOLEWA WAGES A WAR AGAINST RHINO POACHING
“If we come up with measures that completely
eradicate poaching we may not need to look at (trade). We are not looking
for money. We are looking at war. This is a war we must win.
If there is a solution we may not have to look at possible trade,” Minister
Molewa told delegates on the sidelines of the 6th World Parks Congress in Sydney , Australia ,
on 13 November 2014.””
Minister Molewa, supported by Deputy Minister
Barbara Thomson and senior Department of Environmental Affairs, SANParks and
KZN Ezemvelo Wildlife officials, hosted a successful Rhino Conservation Side
Event on the sidelines of the 2014 Congress.
The IUCN World Parks Congress 2014 regarded as a landmark global forum on
protected areas, where the agenda for protected areas conservation will be set
for the next decade.
Outlining the interventions by the South
African government, and conservation bodies, to combat rhino poaching, the
Minister said actions at international level will further strengthen efforts to
not only address rhino poaching, but the illegal wildlife trade in general.
“Unfortunately the threat of poaching has
continued to escalate while various multi-faceted interventions are being
implemented by South Africa .
We are concerned that poaching is part of a multi-billion dollar worldwide
illicit wildlife trade. Addressing the scourge is not simple,” she said.
The multi-disciplinary responses included the
creation of intensive protection zones, translocation of rhino to safe havens
within rhino range states, the introduction of new technology, and
investigating the possibility of a feasible rhino trade, or not.
The Minister emphasised that
no final proposal compiled, or decision made, regarding the future legal trade
in rhino horn as an additional intervention to reduce the levels of poaching.
This means no final proposal has compiled regarding the future legal trade in
rhino horn as an additional intervention to reduce the levels of poaching.
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