The War on Elephants

Author(s)

Alastair Leithead, BBC

Date Published
 
This is a five-part interactive series (The War on Elephants, Men with Poison Arrows, All Routes Lead to Asia, Making Hunters Pay, Living with Elephants). See link for both photos and video
 

Bloated and eerily upright the large adult elephant was still standing where it had been killed – just next to the stream – its face hacked off.

It had been fleeing the carnage in the mud 100m or so away, where the remains of four other adults and one young elephant lay fallen and disfigured, their tusks and trunks all taken for ivory and meat.

Like a macabre statue, this faceless animal stood as a landmark to the horrors of poaching, of the ivory trade, and of the mass slaughter of the last remaining elephants in central Africa.

The pilot of the light aircraft was out on a regular reconnaissance mission when circling vultures drew him to the scene.

The armed rangers on patrol nearby hadn’t heard the shots, so it was the scavengers feasting on the carcasses that had raised the alarm.

Garamba, in the north-eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, is one of the oldest national parks in Africa, designated in 1938.

It covers 14,000 sq km (5,500 sq miles) dominated by savannah grasses, which when green and lush can reach 3m in height, enveloping the elephants and concealing them even from the air.

It’s tough going on foot with the criss-crossing streams that feed the great Congo River, punctuated by papyrus marsh, forest and scrub.

The park was made a World Heritage Site in 1980 for its rare Northern White Rhinos, and with 22,000 elephants back then, they never seemed in danger.

But the last rhino was seen some years ago. Poaching has wiped them out, and now with 95% of the elephants gone, and the killing continuing week after week, these giants are going the same way.

It’s not a good neighbourhood for conservation.

“This park has, to a very, very large extent been poached out by various armed groups,” says Erik Mararv, the 30-year-old African-born Swede who manages Garamba for the non-profit organisation, African Parks.

For many years Joseph Kony’s Lord’s Resistance Army has funded its rampage of rape, kidnap and killing through the ivory trade, but there’s a newer, bigger threat.

The park borders South Sudan, the world’s youngest country, which has been tearing itself apart in civil war for more than two years.

Disparate heavily armed rebel groups regularly pass through, killing the animals, cutting off their tusks and handing them over to traffickers, who smuggle the ivory across the continent and on to its main markets in Asia.

There’s also the threat of local poachers and heavily armed Sudanese horsemen hiding among the nomadic cattle herders who come south through the Central African Republic. It’s thought that soldiers from there and nearby countries have joined the killing frenzy.

“I think Garamba is probably, today, the forefront of conservation in terms of dangers,” says Erik Mararv, whose armed rangers are often outgunned.

“I just don’t think there are many other places which have so many contacts and so many threats to one park as we do here, so it’s really on the edge.”

There is a quiet satisfaction in the poacher’s voice as he describes killing an elephant with a poison arrow.

“We choose an elephant by looking at the size and killing the biggest one,” says Alex, one of three poachers who has agreed to talk on condition of anonymity.

They prefer arrows to guns as they are cheaper, easier to obtain, and quieter, and the man in the middle – who calls himself Master – says the poison, made from a local herb, is highly effective.

Once you shoot the animal it takes just 15 or 20 minutes. So you just track the animal and it collapses.”

Their attitude toward killing elephants is surprisingly matter-of-fact.

“I don’t regret it,” Master says. “I feel heroic, because they terrorise us, they invade our farms. And we don’t get any compensation, so you end up with no food and no money.”

From his perspective there is more value in a dead elephant than in a living one that tourists might pay to see.

“We never know how much money is made from the animals in the parks. There is never any accountability,” he says.

Alan is the quietest of the three. He says that a lack of work, and of money, led him to kill an elephant but that the experience left him feeling remorseful and anxious.

“Because if I kill the animal I am aware I will be in danger and my family will be in problems if I am caught or shot,” he says.

Master has been doing this for six years, and he describes how they take off the tusks and prepare them for sale.

“Once you remove them, there is some meat on them, and they are heavy, so we have to make sure they are clean so they are light to carry,” he says.

We use battery acid to erode the meat or if there is no acid we bury them and the meat rots away.”

Master is a hunter but also a low-level broker, and he explains the process of hiding the ivory in the bush, finding a buyer, negotiating a price and then providing directions to his customer. Being caught in possession of ivory is where the risk lies.

He had at least one tusk for sale, but I wasn’t allowed to see it. He took video footage and photographs of it resting on a daily newspaper as proof it was genuine.

“We don’t sell directly to the Chinese, but we go through local brokers who rip us off. We get maybe 5,000 Kenyan shillings ($50, or £34) per kilogram but they sell it for a lot more. It is not a high-paying job. The people who make the most money are the middlemen.”

And according to Master, corrupt officials allow the whole process to continue.

“They collude with us, we collude with them and once we sell the tusks we give them money,” he says. “Bribery and corruption make it easier, because the salaries they are being paid are not enough.”

The love of ivory goes back millennia. Its pure, translucent beauty and the ease with which a tusk can be carved into intricate sculptures, has given it a lasting value throughout the ages.

A small ivory statue discovered in the Great Pyramid at Giza is the only likeness of a pharaoh who died more than 4,500 years ago.

“You find ivory artefacts in graves that are tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, of years old,” says Tom Milliken, elephant and rhino expert for the wildlife trade monitoring network, Traffic.

Sometimes it’s elephant ivory, sometimes the ivory of an animal now extinct, the mammoth.

Milliken, who has followed the illegal trade in ivory for 30 years, has a theory.

Elephants seem to always get hammered in modern history every time you have a rapid expansion of the middle class.”

“Looking at Victorian England this was the time that colonial Britain imported more ivory than any country in the world, but it’s also the time when you had the greatest expansion of the middle class in the UK.

“The 1970s and 80s was a tragic time for elephants and probably half the population was exterminated for ivory trade to Asia, linked very strongly with the economic growth of places like Japan.

“Now it’s equally devastating, but there are fewer elephants. So again we are in crisis and this time it is being driven by economic development in China.”

From Victorian billiard balls and cutlery handles, through Japanese chopsticks and name seals, to Chinese bangles and mah-jong sets, this latest crisis is perhaps the most serious, he argues.

“China is just a bigger scale,” he says.

And there is another important change, he points out.

“We not only have to address the demand in China, but we also have to address Chinese criminal networks that have penetrated the supply chains here in Africa.

“And that’s a fundamental difference.”

A high-profile publicity campaign driven by social media has been launched in China to try to destroy the demand for ivory by educating people about the impact it has on the African elephant population.

Some big names, such as film star Li Bingbing – with more than 40 million followers on microblogging site Weibo – are among those trying to persuade millennials to boycott ivory products.

Tom Milliken is confident it is possible to persuade Chinese consumers to change their behaviour, because it has been done before – in Japan. But he also wants the Chinese authorities to do more.

“China has to come to Africa and station their own law enforcement investigators to collaborate and work directly with Africans,” he says, welcoming some recent convictions of ivory traffickers in China.

“Every time high-profile Chinese nationals are arrested in the context of a wildlife crime case these investigators could do the interrogation so there is no language problem. They can help the governments put together the cases and try them here.”

In a basement strong-room at the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) headquarters in Nairobi the mountains of tusks reaching from the floor to the ceiling attest to the successes the Kenyan government has had in stopping the illegal ivory trade.

Each individual tusk has been registered and labelled. Accompanied by a team of armed rangers, they are being carried off to be destroyed at the biggest single ivory burn in history.

KWS director general Kitili Mbathi has invited journalists and photographers along to record what’s essentially a very expensive public relations exercise. If the ivory was to be sold it would make a fortune for the Kenyan treasury.

“The reason is to essentially make a statement to the world that number one, we are committed to conservation – and to underline the fact that we don’t believe that there ought to be any value attributed to ivory and rhino horn, except on elephants and rhinos,” he says.

Later this year at a Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) meeting in Johannesburg, the world’s wildlife experts will come together, and one of the key questions up for discussion will be whether today’s limited international legal trade in ivory should be banned outright.

Broadly speaking, southern African countries, where many of Africa’s 400,000 elephants remain, are in favour of selling ivory stockpiles and using the money for conservation. There have been two one-off sales in 1999 and 2008 from southern African countries to China and Japan.

But countries such as Kenya are vehemently opposed to any ivory sales – saying they just encourage the illegal trade – and want a complete ban.

It is a fierce debate within the conservation world. Some argue that because ivory is now being hoarded as a commodity by investors, destroying huge amounts will increase its rarity value and actually put the price up.

“Ivory stock destructions, potentially – and an economist will tell you this in terms of economic theory – increase ivory prices,” says Tom Milliken.

“And if you increase ivory prices you increase the profitability for the criminals, and it actually turns out to be counter-productive.”

He says this has actually happened in China, the price of ivory rising after tonnes of it were publicly destroyed. Locking ivory up and throwing away the key is a good middle ground, he argues, because it keeps the ivory off the market, without increasing its rarity value to speculators.

But you’ve got to find the illegal ivory first.

Asha is an over-zealous Springer spaniel frantically bounding from suitcase to suitcase on a baggage-belt treadmill, behind the scenes at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi.

She’s an ivory dog, specially trained to sniff out illegal wildlife goods hidden in suitcases. When she finds something, she sits, and her trainers suddenly know where to look.

Every shift ends in a discovery and a treat, even if they have to plant it there to keep her interested.

The dogs are used to checking specific routes.

“Those flights going to China, Vietnam and such areas, are the flights we target to make sure there’s no smuggling to those countries,” says KWS ranger Jonathan Musani.

Most of the finds are small trinkets and bangles, but the dogs did recently discover more than 64kg (141lb) of ivory at the airport’s cargo terminal, after a tip-off.

Most of the time those arrested are small-time smugglers. But some suspected high-level traffickers have been arrested in Kenya and in Tanzania, which has lost an astonishing two-thirds of its elephants in the past five years.

Yang Feng Glan, whom the media has dubbed the “Ivory Queen”, is on trial in Dar es Salaam at the moment, charged with trading tusks and leading an organised crime ring.

She denies the charges. And cases against suspected kingpins are being built in Kenya, which has introduced a special Wildlife Prosecution Unit, as well as toughening up its penalties for trafficking tusks.

Tackling demand and destroying the market are both important.

But there are also ways of making elephants more valuable alive than dead.

In the parks and game reserves of Africa, close encounters with the most remarkable animals on the planet lie in wait – you just need time, patience and a good eye.

A stretch of water in south-west Africa known as “the horseshoe” – in Namibia’s Bwabwata National Park – is the place to find elephants when the rainy season scatters them far and wide.

When it’s wet, they don’t need to make the daily trek to a water hole to drink, but this place is a favourite place for a bath, even if bathtime is unpredictable.

After five days visiting the horseshoe to catch a glimpse of an elephant or two, and then hours of staring into the surrounding forest imagining trunks in every tree, a distant trumpeting marked the beginning of the most incredible hour of wildlife watching.

Perhaps 200 elephants bounded out of the trees, down the dirt slope and into the water. The smallest calves had to use their trunks as snorkels when they ventured a little too far.

Few tourists travel to the narrow corridor of land known as the Caprivi Strip, a colonial hangover that gave what was once German West Africa access to the great Zambezi River.

Recent separatist struggles have kept the Zambezi Region off the safari trail.

And while adventurous travellers are now discovering its role as the route the animals take into Botswana’s beautiful Okavango Delta, they don’t bring in enough money for conservation.

But it’s got to come from somewhere.

“Buffalo! Buffalo!” shouts Brutus Musutela, from his vantage point standing on the back of a 4×4. This local community ranger’s keen eye for wildlife has been honed by years of illegal hunting – he now laughs about his transformation from poacher to gamekeeper.

Hundreds of buffalo head towards the parked vehicle, and watching through their binoculars the hunting party begin to discuss which beast they will try to kill.

For his 50th birthday, Andreas Ullrich wanted to shoot a buffalo, and so the German national, now living in Namibia, has come here to do it.

Hunting is banned in Namibia’s national parks, but the land between them has been parcelled up into separate “conservancies” as they are called – areas where the wildlife is managed by the local communities, quotas are set and hunters are invited in.

David Muller, the local professional hunter, is allocated a quota of antelopes and other animals – among them buffaloes and elephants – to be shot in any given year.

“People who are so dead-set against hunting don’t have all the facts about what it’s all about,” he says.

His job is to attract hunters to the conservancy who are prepared to pay big money for a “trophy” – the animal’s head which is taken home and mounted on a wall.

The cost differs, but a poor community in this remote part of Namibia can receive well over $10,000 (£6,900) for an elephant.

Trophy hunting is supposedly to take out the older animals that are going to die in two or three years anyway.”

“Why let it die of old age if it can raise some money for the community?” says Muller.

“Wild animals like buffalo or elephant are like cattle – you can’t run a farm and just keep on breeding cattle because you are going to have too much eventually and nothing is going to survive because there’s not going to be enough grazing.”

The meat from the animal is shared out in the community and the money raised employs rangers and pays for local development.

In Bamunu conservancy it’s been used to buy a communal tractor and four transformers. The power lines being put up will soon bring electricity to its four villages.

“If hunting stops, all the money we are getting will also stop and people will suffer. They will not take their children to school and poaching will increase,” says conservancy chairman Chunga Chunga.

“If poaching is high these animals will be finished and our children will not be able to see these animals – they will just hear that such animals were here.”

Jobs are at risk as well.

When not out on a hunt, Brutus Musutela leads the small band of community rangers who go out on patrol in their conservancy every day carrying precious yellow books.

The books are used to record any rare and significant animals they see, any carcasses they come across and any cases of wildlife damaging crops or hurting people.

Their data is collated and used to set the hunting quotas. If they know how many animals there are, they know how many they can afford to lose.

Accountability is key – the yellow books are made available for all, and if the money doesn’t reach the people everyone knows. This simply wouldn’t work in more corrupt systems and countries where the money would be creamed off and the community wouldn’t feel the direct benefit.

And they are protecting the animals by employing people who might otherwise be poachers.

Hunting often provokes a strong reaction, as demonstrated by the furious response to the shooting of Cecil the lion by an American dentist in Zimbabwe last year.

But the roots of the early conservation movement in Africa lie firmly in the hands of the big game hunters who wanted areas of land set aside for the animals so they could hunt them, not protect them.

“I understand people are getting emotional – Westerners are getting emotional, but here in Namibia it is working,” says Bright Sanzila, the local warden for the Ministry of Environment and Tourism.

“But there is no way you can manage poaching if you are putting the community aside.

“All the money that is coming from hunting is ploughed back to the community – 100% – the government of Namibia does not take a cent from that money.”

One of the few countries allowed to carry out a legal sale of ivory in 1999 and 2008, Namibia has been using the proceeds to pay farmers whose crops have been damaged by wildlife. It’s a very different approach from Kenya’s, where the funds are raised through tourism.

“Tourism works in a number of places, but elephants exist beyond scenic landscapes,” says Traffic’s Tom Milliken.

It’s a very emotive issue and people have very strong moral objections to a human being killing an animal, but from an economic point of view sport hunting has played a major role in extending wildlife habitats all over Africa.”

Although confronted by a herd of buffalo, on this occasion Andreas Ullrich did not get his 50th birthday present.

The animals the hunting party saw were outside the boundary of the conservancy and inside the national park – they were out of bounds.

Hunters, as well as wildlife watchers, need patience.

Hunting is banned in Namibia’s national parks, but the land between them has been parcelled up into separate “conservancies” as they are called – areas where the wildlife is managed by the local communities, quotas are set and hunters are invited in.

David Muller, the local professional hunter, is allocated a quota of antelopes and other animals – among them buffaloes and elephants – to be shot in any given year.

“People who are so dead-set against hunting don’t have all the facts about what it’s all about,” he says.

His job is to attract hunters to the conservancy who are prepared to pay big money for a “trophy” – the animal’s head which is taken home and mounted on a wall.

The cost differs, but a poor community in this remote part of Namibia can receive well over $10,000 (£6,900) for an elephant.

Trophy hunting is supposedly to take out the older animals that are going to die in two or three years anyway.”

“Why let it die of old age if it can raise some money for the community?” says Muller.

“Wild animals like buffalo or elephant are like cattle – you can’t run a farm and just keep on breeding cattle because you are going to have too much eventually and nothing is going to survive because there’s not going to be enough grazing.”

The meat from the animal is shared out in the community and the money raised employs rangers and pays for local development.

In Bamunu conservancy it’s been used to buy a communal tractor and four transformers. The power lines being put up will soon bring electricity to its four villages.

“If hunting stops, all the money we are getting will also stop and people will suffer. They will not take their children to school and poaching will increase,” says conservancy chairman Chunga Chunga.

“If poaching is high these animals will be finished and our children will not be able to see these animals – they will just hear that such animals were here.”

Hunters, as well as wildlife watchers, need patience.

In a small village on the edge of a national park in Kenya a family is grieving for a 10-year-old child, Tippape.

He was tending to the cattle in view of the house one Saturday morning when he was attacked by an elephant and crushed to death.

The whole Masai village grabbed their spears and a gang of 200 headed off into the bush in pursuit.

At least two adult elephants were killed and others badly injured – a calf was orphaned as its mother was one of the dead.

The community is well aware of the benefits the elephants bring, from the tourist visits to the conservation grants for leasing their land.

But when the cost of living alongside elephants is the life of a child, or acres of crops crushed underfoot, difficult decisions have to be made.

There is a stark difference between the way Westerners view elephants, through the prism of safari holidays and wildlife documentaries, and the perception of those who have to live with them.

And in future more people will be living with them.

The number of Africans will double from one billion to two billion people in the next 20 years and there must be somewhere for them to live, somewhere for their food to be grown and for their cattle to graze.

Europe wiped out its vast forests and its big wildlife centuries ago, and there is hypocrisy in asking Africa to protect its landscape at the expense of economic growth.

“If we are going to demand that Africa keeps certain places pristine for animals,” says Tom Milliken of Traffic, “either the world is going to have to pay for it, or the resources that are there – the living animals – are going to have to pay for it in some way.”

There is another problem too, both for humans and elephants – loss of habitat as a result of climate change. As it intensifies the competition for space will only increase.

A hundred years ago there were perhaps 10 million elephants in Africa. Today there are fewer than half a million and that number is falling fast.

They won’t become extinct in our lifetimes, but their presence on the planet could be dramatically reduced.

“The worst-case scenario will be maybe 100,000 elephants in highly protected areas throughout Africa surrounded by fences and people on the ground patrolling, making sure no poachers are coming in,” says wildlife analyst Esmond Bradley Martin.

“It is up to the governments to decide how much land they are going to allocate for elephants.”

About half of Africa’s remaining elephants roam the sparsely populated spaces of the Kavango Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area – a cross-border region the size of France shared between Angola, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

A new elephant census to be published this year is expected to show a healthy population here, and in some places there are too many elephants for the habitat.

But in most places – as in Garamba and Tanzania – elephants are in decline.

Zimbabwe, for example, is starting to suffer, as cyanide taken from mines is being deliberately put in waterholes to kill elephants for their tusks – wiping out many other animals at the same time.

In some countries though, ways have been found to make live elephants worth more than dead ones.

Garamba’s militarised ranger force is funded by benefactors, as tourists don’t come to relax in a place surrounded by war. But African Parks, which runs Garamba, has made huge progress at one of its other parks in Chad.

“The bringer of peace to the region has been the elephants,” says Garamba park manager Erik Mararv, referring to Chad.

“The rangers have been a huge asset for peace in the whole vicinity around the park,” he says, providing jobs, but also improving security in place hit hard by lawlessness and violence.

“People have seen that the elephants have much more value as a peace-bringer than [the] commercial value of [their] tusks.”

Tourism and tougher laws and penalties are working together in Kenya, where the level of poaching in the past five years spiked and then dropped significantly.

In Namibia it’s hunting that has given value to live elephants, and a high level of accountability ensures the cash goes where it should.

Solutions in one country do not necessarily work in another, when levels of corruption differ and attitudes towards wildlife change.

“We need a whole variety of tools in our box if we are going to win,” says Tom Miliken.

Reducing the demand for ivory and tackling the traffickers are key among these tools. Without success on these fronts, the poachers will simply move to countries where it’s possible to obtain tusks without being caught.

This may be why Botswana is taking such a hard line against poachers, with what is assumed to be a shoot-to-kill policy.

“The whole global community has to come together to make a future for elephants,” says Milliken.

“I think if you lose elephants you are saying something about the future of humanity.

“If we can’t learn to live sustainably on Earth, if we can’t learn to share space with other creatures, what future is there for us in the long term?”

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/resources/idt-6d40b788-af2f-4646-8177-c8db7ce6a881