So, what can be done?
The illicit trade in ivory and rhinoceros horn is kept alive by poachers who will risk everything, criminal syndicates that, apparently, have the impunity to do what they like, and customers who will pay exorbitant amounts of money for what they want. In the end, it all comes down to price.
As long as end consumers are prepared to pay enormous sums for rhino horn, criminal syndicates will continue to control the trade routes, and gangs and militias in impoverished African countries will continue to control the poaching. Disarming and eliminating the gangs or breaking-up the criminal syndicates is almost certainly beyond the competence or political will of most governments. And in poverty-stricken African countries where corruption is rife and wildlife conservation is a long way down the priority list, achieving such a solution is nothing more than an idealistic Western pipe dream.
“If, however, the prices come down substantially – below the level at which it would be profitable for the syndicates to operate – the scale of operations of the criminal enterprises dealing in rhino horn will be forced to diminish,” writes Orenstein.
So how do we lower prices? There are many who vehemently believe that the answer lies in legalising – and therefore legitimising and controlling – the trade in rhino horn. But this would undoubtedly be fraught with problems as it assumes that those who would control the supply of rhino horn – in return for a profit, of course – can be trusted not to milk the system and, in the end, exacerbate the problem.
In short, there is no obvious quick fix. Rather, a long-term, multi-pronged approach is required, one that seeks to address the problem at source – eliminating, or at the very least substantially reducing, the demand for rhino horn – while simultaneously defending our rhinos on the ground with everything we have got.
Anti-poaching initiatives and operations with support at local, national and international level can be highly effective. In 2016, a total of 680 poachers and traffickers were arrested for rhino-related poaching offences in South Africa, up from 317 in 2015. In conjunction, the number of rhinos lost to poachers dropped from 1,175 in 2015 to 1,054 in 2016, representing a decline of 10.3 per cent. More specifically, in Kruger National Park, where a total of 417 arrests were made in 2016, the number of rhino poaching incidents dropped from 826 in 2015 to 662 last year. This represents a reduction of almost 20 per cent year on year. And this is despite a continued increase in the number of illegal incursions into the park.
“We are fighting a war that can’t be won here in South Africa.”
“We are fighting a war that can’t be won here in South Africa,” says a tired and disheartened Thabo Mkhize, a South African wildlife ranger. “Until the problem is addressed at source, they (the poachers) will keep coming, and we will keep losing rhinos, despite our best efforts. We are their last line of defence, but we can’t keep it up for ever. In the end, we will lose this war and our rhino will go the way of their northern cousins.”
Of course, Thabo is right – the only way to truly turn the tide is to eliminate the demand, and that can only be achieved by educating the end consumer, by dispelling myths and appealing to the one thing that all humans have in common – our humanity. “People are greedy,” adds Thabo. “But if those who buy rhino horn in bars in Vietnam saw the sickening things that I see every day, they might think twice. At least I like to believe they would.”
I often think back to that moment when I encountered that magnificent black rhino in Pilanesberg National Park in 2000, eight years before this rhino poaching pandemic caught South Africa off-guard. I wonder if that bull is still alive, or if, like so many of his kind, he has been senselessly killed for his horn?
One thing I do know is that the time for helpless indecision has long past; Africa’s last remaining rhinos are once again staring down the barrel of a gun – it is up to us to make sure that the trigger isn’t pulled.