Document says poachers could undercut Kenya's fight against wildlife crime
A Kenya Wildlife Service ranger stands in front of burning ivory at the
Nairobi National Park on April 30, 2016. PHOTO | JEFF ANGOTE | NAIROBI
Protection of wildlife, especially endangered
species, is still a distant dream even as Kenya is seen ...
to have made
commendable steps in combating poaching, says a wildlife report released
on Monday.
According to the report by Traffic, a wildlife trade monitoring network, sophisticated poachers, among other factors, could undercut the country’s fight against wildlife crime.
The
report, "Wildlife protection and trafficking assessment in Kenya:
Drivers and trends of transnational wildlife crime in Kenya and its role
as a transit point for trafficked species in East Africa", identifies
Kenya as a key African transit country for illicit wildlife items.
Traffic
recognises Kenya’s effort in taking a bold stand against wildlife crime
through improved enforcement action and imposition of higher penalties
for wildlife crimes and by being the only African range state to report a
significant fall in the number of rhinos poached last year.
But
it singles out the country as a key source and transit point for
wildlife commodities exiting Africa. It goes on to say actions taken to
stem wildlife crime are at risk of being undermined by weaknesses in
laws governing wildlife trafficking, corruption, weak capacity and high
demand in Asian markets.
NO COOPERATION
Further,
the lack of regional and international cooperation in East Africa to
address wildlife crime is identified as a critical weakness, hindering
efforts that would enable more emphasis to be placed on
intelligence-based operations and make them more effective in targeting
criminals higher up the trade chain.
“Corruption
among government and private sector officials, porous borders, and
endemic conflict among communities in northern Kenya facilitate the
illicit flow of weapons used by local poachers, key enabling factors of
the illegal wildlife trade,” states the report.
“The
fact that wildlife contraband, especially rhino horn and elephant
ivory, has been exported from Kenya only to be seized in transit or in
destination countries means that wildlife traffickers are able to
exploit security loopholes in the country’s law enforcement network,” it
says.
Among other findings, the report highlights Kilindini port
in Mombasa and Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi as key
exit points from the continent for illegally traded wildlife products
from countries including Tanzania, Mozambique, the Democratic Republic
of Congo, Uganda, Zambia and South Sudan. Since 2009, more ivory has been shipped through Mombasa than any other trade route out of Africa, it says.
“Future
enforcement interventions in Kenya and elsewhere in the region need to
be internationally co-ordinated and focus on targeting the middlemen and
kingpins of large-scale trafficking, rather than easily replaceable
low-level poachers and transport mules,” says Steven Broad, the
executive director of Traffic.
According to the
report, after years of recovery, Kenya’s elephant population is
experiencing a marginal decline, with around 32,500 animals left in the
wild — well below the estimated population of 167,000 in 1973.
Similarly, since 1970, Kenya’s rhinoceros population fell from around
20,000 to just 650 black and 381 white rhinos in 2014.
'CONSIDERABLE PROGRESS'
Dr
Richard Leakey, the Chairman of the Kenya Wildlife Service, says:
“Traffic’s report highlights the considerable progress made by the
authorities in addressing wildlife poaching and trafficking in Kenya but
does not shy away from acknowledging the considerable challenges that
lie ahead: it is a blueprint for taking action against the organized
criminal syndicates who undermine our society and rob us of our
wildlife”.
In spite of the challenges and limited resources, the
report applauds Kenya for achieving tremendous improvements in tackling
wildlife crime.Under the Wildlife Conservation and Management Act (WCMA) of 2013, the government is enforcing very high minimum penalties of Sh20 million and or life imprisonment for killing threatened species.
Prior to the enactment of the law, a
study of wildlife crime cases prosecuted between 2008 and 2013 showed
only 4 per cent of people convicted of wildlife crimes went to jail, and
in relation to ivory and rhino horn cases, only 7 per cent of offenders
were incarcerated after conviction.
However, in spite of recent landmark rulings such as the January 2014 imposition of a minimum fine of Sh20 million on a Chinese ivory smuggler
arrested in transit from Mozambique through Kenya with 3.4kg of raw
ivory, and the handing of a four-year jail term in May 2015 to a Kenyan
woman found guilty of possessing five pieces of elephant tusks,
prosecuting wildlife crime in Kenya is still greatly hampered by an
inadequate number of wildlife crime prosecutors, says the report.
The
report also highlights unclear laws and the inclusion of high minimum
penalties within the WCMA as resulting in an increase in “not guilty”
pleas and a consequent rise in the number of trials in a Kenyan system
already suffering from a significant backlog of cases as impediments to
the country’s performance in stamping out wildlife crime.
No comments :
Post a Comment