Zimbabwe to export elephants
Visitors look on as an elephant and calf cross a road inside Zimbabwe's Hwange National Park, in this Dec. 21, 2014 photo.
HARARE: Wildlife authorities in Zimbabwe on Wednesday announced plans to export at least 62 elephants to top up scant state funding and curb a ballooning pachyderm population.
"Zimbabwe got allocations from CITES to export elephants to suitable destinations and one of the destinations is China," Jerry Gotora, chairman of the parks and wildlife authority, said.
Exports would start in the first quarter of next year after assessment of their destination, he said. He said buyers from the UAE want 15 elephants, China 27 and France between 15 and 20.
But a local animal rights group claimed that elephant calves dragged from their mothers were being sent squashed in containers to Maputo for export to China.
"There is nothing unusual about the exports," Gotora countered. "The major reason we are selling off the elephants is because we want to ensure sustainable use of our natural resources.
"We have 80,000 elephants against a carrying capacity of 42,000 and this is not sustainable in the long run. The exports are carefully controlled by CITES.
"All those making noise about it are people who do not want Zimbabwe to benefit from its resources."
Last year at least 300 elephants died in Hwange national park after poachers poisoned the environs of their watering halls with cyanide.
Visitors look on as an elephant and calf cross a road inside Zimbabwe's Hwange National Park, in this Dec. 21, 2014 photo.
HARARE: Wildlife authorities in Zimbabwe on Wednesday announced plans to export at least 62 elephants to top up scant state funding and curb a ballooning pachyderm population.
"Zimbabwe got allocations from CITES to export elephants to suitable destinations and one of the destinations is China," Jerry Gotora, chairman of the parks and wildlife authority, said.
Exports would start in the first quarter of next year after assessment of their destination, he said. He said buyers from the UAE want 15 elephants, China 27 and France between 15 and 20.
But a local animal rights group claimed that elephant calves dragged from their mothers were being sent squashed in containers to Maputo for export to China.
"There is nothing unusual about the exports," Gotora countered. "The major reason we are selling off the elephants is because we want to ensure sustainable use of our natural resources.
"We have 80,000 elephants against a carrying capacity of 42,000 and this is not sustainable in the long run. The exports are carefully controlled by CITES.
"All those making noise about it are people who do not want Zimbabwe to benefit from its resources."
Last year at least 300 elephants died in Hwange national park after poachers poisoned the environs of their watering halls with cyanide.