SanParks hails conviction of notorious rhino poaching kingpin after hefty 27-year sentence; sidekick also jailed

Richard Sowry, a regional ranger at Pafuri camp in the Kruger National Park, speaks on poaching in the park. l TIMOTHY BERNARD/INDEPENDENT NEWSPASPERS

Richard Sowry, a regional ranger at Pafuri camp in the Kruger National Park, speaks on poaching in the park. l TIMOTHY BERNARD/INDEPENDENT NEWSPASPERS

Published Sep 14, 2024

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A Mozambican court has sentenced Simon Ernesto Valoi, alias “Navara”, to 27 years in prison for his role as a poaching syndicate leader.

His accomplice, Paulo Zukula, received a 24-year sentence. Valoi, from Massingir, was found guilty of multiple crimes, including financing terrorism, poaching, and money laundering.

Valoi’s wealth and influence had long protected him from prosecution, but a coordinated intelligence operation led to his arrest in July 2022.

Authorities seized rhino horns during the arrest, and several of Valoi’s relatives were detained for their alleged roles in the organised crime network.

The Wildlife Justice Commission, which works to disrupt wildlife trafficking networks, collaborated with Mozambican authorities on the case. SANParks welcomed the conviction, highlighting the impact of Valoi’s crimes on rhino populations in the Kruger National Park.

Poaching in the world-renowned Kruger National Park could spell the end of its existence if it was not curbed, said Richard Sowry, a regional ranger at the KNP’s Pafuri camp.

Sowry, speaking to the Saturday Star’s’ sister paper, The Star, during a media excursion in the past, said this could have devastating economic, social and ecological implications.

“Humans seem to think that there would not be adverse problems from it… We all see the problems because we are all connected ecologically

“The system is very connected to us as humans; it affects water and clean air… the number of people the KNP directly employs will be affected. Even those that live outside the park work here and they go buy their food and clothes at shopping centres out there, but without the park, those shopping centres would have to close down,” he said.

Sowry added that poachers used all forms of methods, including poisoning, which could be the worst kind because of the ripple effect it caused.

Sowry added that poaching was unsustainable and caused accumulative damage to the economy. He said this was true for both subsistence and commercial poaching. “Some of the poachers are forced into the criminal industry, because they need to sustain their lives.

“(Others), especially rhino poachers, are commercial because they would have been sent by someone to come into the park for that rhino horn,” Sowry added.

The park spent more than R250 million to deter poaching in the 2023 financial year alone. Some efforts to deter poaching in the park include the introduction of free-running hounds.

Dogs were introduced almost eight years ago to, arguably, South Africa’s number one national park to curb mostly the poaching of rhinos for their horns.

During a SA National Parks tour in Mathekenyane, near Skukuza, last year, journalists witnessed the dogs in action when the park management simulated poachers getting arrested after being tracked by about six to eight free-running dogs.

The dogs were set off about half a kilometre from the hideout of rangers who pretended to be poachers. Running at rapid speeds, the hounds tracked the scent to exactly where the rangers were within minutes, while two helicopters hovered to catch them off guard.

Rhino are the most poached animals in the Kruger, resulting in their numbers dwindling rapidly. A total of 451 rhinos were poached in South Africa in 2021, 327 within government reserves and 124 on private property.

Although there was a 24% decrease in rhino poaching compared with the pre-Covid-19 period in 2019, there has been an increase in poaching on private properties.

In 2021, 209 rhinos were poached for their horns in South Africa’s national parks, whereas in 2020, 247 were poached.

Besides poisoning and shooting of the rhinos, another rife form of poaching is snaring. In October last year, field and honorary rangers claim to have removed more than 3 000 snares that were placed across the park to trap the animals.

According to the statistics, this ruthless form of poaching has been on the increase in recent years, showing more than 7 000 snares in last year, as opposed to 4 000 in 2021.

Saturday Star

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