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Wildlife Conservation Society members inspect a poached elephant shot dead by poachers with an AK-47. Photo: AP

Poachers 'industrialise' elephant slaughter in Mozambique

Mozambique faces a 'national disaster' as poachers poison ponds and use machine guns

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Elephant poaching is happening on an unprecedented and "industrialised" scale in Mozambique, environmentalists have warned, after 22 of the animals were killed for their tusks in the first two weeks of September.

The Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) said organised-crime syndicates were slaughtering between 1,500 and 1,800 elephants a year in the southern African country, feeding demand for ivory in East Asia. There are fears that Mozambique's elephant herds could be extinct within a decade.

The crisis, described by the WCS as a "national disaster", was discussed during a two-day meeting of Mozambican officials, law enforcement agents and diplomats in the capital, Maputo.

Carlos Pareira, an adviser to the New York-based WCS, told the seminar of the worsening situation in Niassa, the country's biggest game reserve, where "in the first two weeks of September alone we counted 22 elephants that had been killed".

The Niassa reserve, co-managed by the WCS with the Mozambican authorities, is double the size of South Africa's popular Kruger national park.

Pareira said: "The killing of elephants in the north of Mozambique . . . is reaching proportions never seen before.

"The killing of elephants is being industrialised."

Poachers use automatic weapons and high-calibre hunting rifles to kill the animals, the meeting heard. In the northern Tete province, they poison drinking-water sources, killing not only elephants, while spikes concealed in the bush have also been used to wound animals in the coastal Querimbas reserve, causing them slow and agonising deaths from gangrene.

Between 480 and 900 elephants died in the Querimbas between 2011 and 2013, according to a recent aerial study commissioned by the WWF.

Ivory from Mozambique had been traced to markets in Hong Kong and Taiwan, but trinkets and carvings were also sold in Maputo, the meeting heard.

An estimated 25,000 elephants are killed every year in Africa for their tusks, double the number killed in 2007. A global march to stop elephant and rhino poaching will be held across 125 cities on 4 October.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Elephant slaughter 'industrial' in scale
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