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British elephant killers in Zimbabwe

Category: Uncategorized | Date: Jan 18 2009 | By: baraza

Another shocking story from Melissa Groo at Save the Elephants deserves some discussion about the justification of this action. Please feel free to leave a comment, opinion or insult for the British Killers.

British kill entire elephant herd (Zimbabwe) 

Hunting parties are paying out thousands to kill elephants, including calves, in Zimbabwe

Daniel Foggo, The Sunday Times

January 18, 2009

BRITISH hunters, including a prominent Harley Street surgeon, have been paying the Zimbabwean authorities thousands of pounds each to take part in a mass elephant cull.

They are among groups of hunters who have been permitted to track and kill whole herds, including their calves, before taking photographs of themselves with the carcasses.

Rumours that Zimbabwe was culling its population of 80,000-100,000 elephants have been circulating for some time, but definitive proof that foreigners have been paying to be involved has emerged only now.

Elephant culls are highly controversial. They typically involve killing every animal in a herd, usually about a dozen strong, and they are condemned as brutal and unnecessary by many conservationists.

Supporters argue that the animals are destroying ecosystems by stripping whole areas of edible foliage and monopolising water sources, and that killing is the only effective method of population control.

Alternatives, such as habitat expansion, relocation and even the use of contraception, are proposed by wildlife campaign groups, but the hunters reject them as unworkable.

Peter Carr, a professional hunting outfitter from Yorkshire, took a party to the Hwange national park last year to cull a herd of 11 elephants, including some “adolescent” calves.

The game reserve, which is Zimbabwe’s largest at more than 5,600 square miles, is said to be home to about 50,000 elephants, more than double its capacity.

One of Carr’s party was Benjamin Chang, a British orthopaedic surgeon who is based in London’s Harley Street. He paid £5,600 to take part, most of which was passed on to the Zimbabwean park authorities.

Chang and Carr shot three elephants each. Unlike conventional trophy-hunters, clients taking part in culls are not permitted to keep any part of the elephant; but they are allowed to take photographs.

Ivory from slaughtered elephants has been legally sold by the Zimbabwean authorities to China and Japan. Last November, Zimbabwe sold nearly four tons of ivory in a one-off sale permitted under international law, for £330,000.

The British hunters, who used specialist rifles to kill the elephants, said shooting was the most humane method of killing, although sometimes more than one shot was necessary to dispatch an animal.

Elephant welfare campaigners were horrified. Will Travers of the Born Free Foundation said: “These days it takes something pretty extraordinary to shock and distress as far as Zimbabwe is concerned. But news of the slaughter of elephants inside national parks still has the power to make you sick to your stomach.”

Michael Wamithi, the elephant programme manager for the International Fund for Animal Welfare said British hunters paying to kill elephants were unlikely to help Zimbabwean conservation efforts. “Because of the corruption and financial situation I would be surprised if anything at all reached conservation or communities,” he said.

However, Carr said he believed that the money would be used to help maintain the stability of the wildlife in the park.

Carr, author of a forthcoming book, Death in the Bush Veldt, which includes chapters on hunting elephants and other big game, said: “The elephants are slowly turning the land there into a desert. I consider myself a champion for elephants but they must be culled, although it’s such an awful word it makes the bunnyhuggers spit their dummies out.

“No one feels great after culling a herd: it is quite a sombre mood. You have to kill all of them - if any escape they can spread panic in other herds.”

Carr said the cull has been kept low-key. “I was asked last year if I could find clients to go over and shoot 100 elephants as part of the cull,” he said.

“I took one party over [including Chang] and had another 18 clients lined up, half of whom were British, but after that the reports of violence and unrest caused them to back out.”

The overall African elephant population has dropped from 1.3m in 1979 to about 500,000 today, but in some areas they are considered too numerous. South Africa is proposing a cull of elephants in Kruger national park for the first time since 1995.

In Zimbabwe starving people have resorted to killing elephants for food, and recent reports have suggested Mu-gabe’s soldiers are being given meat from carcasses.

Chang, 49, said it was right to use the elephants to feed the Zimbabwean people. “The meat goes to the village. They are queuing at the camp saying, ‘Please give us the meat.’ I was told one elephant will feed one village for 3½ months,” he said.

The hunter, who struck a thumbs-up pose for a picture of him astride an elephant he had shot, went on to shoot a lioness in South Africa. He defended the practice of foreigners paying to kill elephants. “The army could have done the cull themselves but they don’t have the right guns. You can’t use an automatic rifle, that would just be cruel,” he said.

Rich game

Big game hunting is a rich man’s pastime. Hunters must pay a fee to kill each animal, and are usually allowed to keep the skins as a “trophy”.

The so-called big five are the most popular prey. A bull elephant costs upwards of £6,500 and can be as expensive as £37,000. Lions cost between £8,000 and £15,000, buffalos from £6,000 and leopards between £8,000 and £15,000. White rhinos, which are often tranquillised with a dart rather than killed, start at about £5,000.

Article at the following link:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article5537002.ece

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8 Responses to “British elephant killers in Zimbabwe”

tm, on 18 Jan 2009

I pray the culling will ease the strain on the environment there. Their numbers are destroying the earth and need to be managed b/c they have been OVER protected. This the best way to do it. It raises money, feeds the locals, and doesn’t cost Zimbabwe a dollar. All other methods are VERY expensive to implement and just are not reasonable.

Next up, Kruger. The numbers are far to large for the land to handle.

Brenton H, on 18 Jan 2009

These hunters are a disgrace to our species. One can say little else! Also, just like the bullies who go duck hunting etc and dare to call it a Sport!

sheryl, washington, dc, on 18 Jan 2009

Murdering bastards! I hope the rest of their lives are miserable and pathetic, just like their brutal disregard for any lives but their own. There is NO excuse, NO reason for killing any non-human animal for any reason. Bastards.

s.

Pirjo,Finland, on 19 Jan 2009

In old days Africa had plenty to offer for big land animals, such as elephants. There was no problem in having over a million elephants moving from one place to another in search of fruitful pastures and water. Since then the human population growth has exploded to such proportions that soon there will not be space for any other species than us humans. It’s disgusting and a disgrace to take part in gulling and trophy hunting. It’s sad having to admit that these kind of people can also be found in my native land Finland. A top rank military person boasted about his hunting trip to Africa, where he was able to shoot a cheetah. This animal is now stuffed in his living room. What a manly thing to do… I have always wondered why instead of gulling herds they could not be relocated to another place/country. There seems to be no hope for the wild animals in Zimbabve when total chaos has taken over the country. It’s unexceptable that rich people looking for a bit of excitement are taken advantage of situations like this. It also makes me really angry that most people are totally oblivious to what is going around us.

Steven Earl Salmony, on 19 Jan 2009

A jeremiad concerning wasting time and keeping silent.

My not-so-great generation of elders will likely be remembered as the perpetrators of the most perverse, self-serving silence in human history. No other generation has taken so much from this good Earth, threatened the very future of its own children and given so little of themselves to preserve life for coming generations. Photographs of us will disclose both our corpulence and hollowness.

Although the disclosure of truth is unsettling, hiding the truth from the human community could be a monstrous example of human-driven foolery, one that could soon lead to a colossal ecological wreckage.

To suppress the truth by conscientiously substituting whatsoever could somehow be true with willful silence is tantamount to the commission of a pernicious lie.

A widely shared and consensually validated determination among people with knowledge to maintain their silence, when remaining silent betrays intellectual honesty, conceals the truth and thwarts courageous action, is the most dangerous of all global threats to the family of humanity, life as we know it and the preservation of Earth as a fit place for human habitation.

From this perspective, perhaps we can begin to apprehend the actual, most formidable enemy of future human wellbeing and environmental health.

Steven Earl Salmony
AWAREness Campaign on the Human Population,
established 2001
http://sustainabilityscience.org/content.html?contentid=1176
http://sustainabilitysoutheast.org/index.php
http://www.panearth.org

Anna M, on 19 Jan 2009

Considering the ongoing efforts by some powerful tyrannys in Zimbabwe that have now turned the whole country (one of the naturally riches, full of potential and beautiful on the African continent) in to a Human and wildlife tragedy (or maybe a Dessert is more appropriate) !!….

So what is left but to kill and feed the population on ele meat, bring in some dollars and pounds in the process and blame the elephant population for bringing about a DESERT ! (theu are most likely trapped in what was a protected area) ! Something has to give in Zimbabwe and culling their elephants is not the answer….

As for Desert, we know the work and analyses that was made in Tsavo going back to the 50, 60 & 70ish that contradict the soil erosion blamed on elephants, they are in many ways the guardinans of the past, middle and future for the whole natrual cycle of the eco system around them…

George, on 30 Jan 2009

TM:

If you want to talk about overpopulation and strain on the environment, you needn’t blame it on other species.

neels, on 30 Jan 2009

This is very sad, but will save the habitat from further destruction. It is better to kill small family groups (that make up super herds that communicate over long distances and that will surely upset other groups ) than to leave orphans - it still breaks my heart!

Giving a community a financial stake in looking after wildlife is a sensible way and sustainable form of wildlife management

I am not a hunter, but I eat meat…so…what we eat is a very cultural thing…bugs, sheep, cats, chicken, beef, snakes, camels…fish

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