Elephant
deaths in Tanzania have risen dramatically since the government abandoned a
shoot-to-kill policy against poachers, officials admit.
Lazaro Nyalandu, the deputy minister of natural resources and tourism, said 60 elephants were "butchered" in November and December, compared with two in October.
Soldiers,
police, game rangers and forestry officers had been involved in a month-long
crackdown on poachers, codenamed Operation Terminate, in October. But the
operation was suspended after an inquiry by MPs uncovered a litany of arbitrary
murder, rape, torture and extortion of innocent people.
Mizengo
Pinda, the prime minister, told Reuters: "The anti-poaching operation had
good intentions, but the reported murders, rapes and brutality are totally
unacceptable."
The
inquiry's findings – including the killing of 13 civilians and arrest of more
than 1,000 people – led to the sacking of the tourism minister Khamis
Kagasheki, who had called for perpetrators of the illicit ivory trade to be
executed "on the spot",as well as the defence minister Shamsi Vuai
Nahodha, the home affairs minister Emmanuel Nchimbi and the livestock
development minister David Mathayo.
Nyalandu
said that, with the operation on hold, the government would appeal to foreign
donors to help Tanzania's wildlife department and ranger service. "Those
to be approached include the European Union and Asian countries," he was
quoted as saying in media reports. "Asian countries are reportedly the
main consumers of elephant tusks and byproducts."
There is
huge demand for elephant tusks in many Asian countries, where they are used to
make ornaments. In August 2011, Tanzanian authorities seized more than 1,000
elephant tusks hidden in sacks of dried fish at Zanzibar port and destined for
Malaysia.
Recent research
by the International Union for Conservation of Nature found that 22,000
elephants were killed in 2012 and Africa will lose one-fifth of its elephants
in the next decade if the poaching crisis is not arrested. There were around
10m African elephants at the start of the 20th century, but that number has
fallen to 500,000 owing to poaching and habitat loss.
The
international trade in ivory was banned in 1989 but it has been dubbed the
"white gold of jihad" by activists who say it is funding armed rebel
groups including al-Shabaab, the militia behind the siege of the Westgate
shopping mall in Nairobi, Kenya, that left at least 67 people dead.
With
70,000-80,000 elephants in 2009, Tanzania is believed to be home to nearly a
sixth of all African elephants. A recent census at one of the country's biggest
wildlife parks, Selous Game Reserve, showed elephant populations had plummeted
to just 13,000 from 55,000 previously.
Last year a
Tanzanian MP said poaching was out of control with an average of 30 elephants
killed for their ivory every day. Media reports have alleged that some MPs and
other officials are involved in and benefiting from the lucrative ivory trade.
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