Friday, May 2, 2008 - Page updated at 12:00 AM
E-mail article
Print view Share:
Digg
Newsvine
South Africa ends ban on killing elephants
The Associated Press
DAKAR, Senegal — South Africa lifted a 13-year ban on killing elephants Thursday, a move conservationists warn could encourage poachers to slaughter the animals for ivory and threaten dwindling populations elsewhere on the continent.
Elephants — once on the verge of extinction in some parts of South Africa — are flourishing, with the population there growing more than 5 percent annually in recent years as a result of well-managed national parks.
South African authorities want to keep a lid on the burgeoning numbers of elephants and protect their viability. Killing elephants, which have no predators and can turn woodlands to grass and stubs in a matter of years, is the best way to control the population, South African officials say.
However, the huge mammals have not done as well elsewhere, and some conservationists say the end of South Africa's moratorium on killing elephants will have repercussions far beyond its borders.
In war-ravaged Congo's Virunga National Park, for example, 14 elephants have been killed since mid-April by soldiers, militias and villagers — an upsurge in poaching that is "part of a widespread slaughter across the Congo Basin" of Central Africa, according to Dr. Emmanuel de Merode, director of the conservation group WildlifeDirect.
The increase in elephant poaching is "being driven by developments on the international scene: the liberalization of the ivory trade, being pushed by South Africa, and the increased presence of Chinese operators on the ground, who feed a massive domestic demand for ivory in their home country," de Merode said.
A four-year war ended in Congo in 2002, but huge swathes of the east remain gripped by violence involving militias and rebels, who since last year have occupied a southern part of Virunga park that is home to one of the last mountain-gorilla populations on Earth.
Virunga, a forested region straddling eastern Congo's borders with Rwanda and Uganda, is home to around 350 elephants, one-tenth the number found there in 1959. The 14 elephants were killed in the Mabenga district, north of the so-called gorilla sector near the regional capital, Goma.
And in Virunga, "the concern is that this news is filtering through to the well-armed groups in the area who now see an opportunity to raise funds by killing elephants for ivory," the group said.
Indian peacekeepers in the region have been accused of flying a helicopter into the park to swap ammunition for ivory.
Some environmental groups, such as World Wildlife Fund, have cautiously welcomed the South African move, calling it "responsible." Others, such as Animal Rights Africa, have threatened to promote tourist boycotts, saying the lifting of the ban could be repeated in other southern African nations.
South Africa has about 18,000 elephants, and the southern African region is home to about 300,000 total — half of all the elephants on the continent.
Elephants need to roam widely to get their daily diet of up to about 660 pounds of grass, leaves and twigs and up to 52 gallons of water.
There is no consensus on how to manage elephant populations. Southern African countries favor killing elephants while East African nations such as Kenya are struggling to keep numbers up.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
UPDATE - 11:40 AM

Enjoy 3 courses for $30, May 1-29
Dine at 23 new Seattle-area restaurants.
New Urban Eats, a dining event from NWsource.
View participating restaurants
Enter to win dinner for two
- Ken Griffey Jr. pays off debt to Reds teammate in pennies
- Lawyers pressured Nickels to say Seattle won't miss the Sonics | Sonics
- Mugging of cyclist in tunnel spurs warning
- Road trip! 10 close-to-home summer vacations
- Jailed museum director's death linked to infection
- Man kept posing as cop to get drugs, police say
- Backward-evolving Lake Washington fish lends clues about genetics
- Seahawks sign AFL receiver Chas Gessner to a 2-year contract
- Seattle U. prof held in online sex sting
- Gay marriage opponents vow to fight Calif. ruling
- Road trip! 10 close-to-home summer vacations
- UW plan merges forestry school, 5 others
- Mount Rainier's Paradise Inn rejuvenated, ready for guests
- A personality test for your cat
- Backward-evolving Lake Washington fish lends clues about genetics
- Mugging of cyclist in tunnel spurs warning
- Region's jazz legacy in spotlight again at Essentially Ellington
- Gay marriage opponents vow to fight Calif. ruling
- Obama's Appalachian problem | Close-up
- New off-leash dog park opens in Sammamish
