Berliner Boersenzeitung - Inside South Africa's wildlife CSI school helping to catch poachers

EUR -
AED 4.154287
AFN 80.408069
ALL 98.520484
AMD 441.555935
ANG 2.038467
AOA 1036.034688
ARS 1323.545745
AUD 1.76325
AWG 2.035877
AZN 1.924877
BAM 1.953835
BBD 2.291775
BDT 137.911305
BGN 1.952619
BHD 0.426569
BIF 3375.989906
BMD 1.131043
BND 1.483002
BOB 7.843112
BRL 6.417987
BSD 1.135053
BTN 95.92453
BWP 15.538099
BYN 3.714532
BYR 22168.433619
BZD 2.279987
CAD 1.559516
CDF 3249.484845
CHF 0.935039
CLF 0.027935
CLP 1071.99087
CNY 8.224206
CNH 8.229907
COP 4799.126566
CRC 573.315824
CUC 1.131043
CUP 29.972627
CVE 110.15422
CZK 24.951961
DJF 202.127618
DKK 7.464298
DOP 66.801933
DZD 150.107049
EGP 57.568483
ERN 16.965638
ETB 152.324736
FJD 2.555534
FKP 0.844211
GBP 0.849763
GEL 3.104754
GGP 0.844211
GHS 16.174733
GIP 0.844211
GMD 80.867405
GNF 9830.895954
GTQ 8.741209
GYD 238.190456
HKD 8.77296
HNL 29.455247
HRK 7.531158
HTG 148.288902
HUF 404.590853
IDR 18719.319419
ILS 4.116904
IMP 0.844211
INR 95.713326
IQD 1486.898081
IRR 47631.030525
ISK 145.700384
JEP 0.844211
JMD 179.688496
JOD 0.802141
JPY 162.13325
KES 146.93368
KGS 98.909817
KHR 4543.370562
KMF 491.444561
KPW 1017.895622
KRW 1616.021848
KWD 0.346665
KYD 0.945936
KZT 582.476489
LAK 24540.211881
LBP 101700.322707
LKR 339.776791
LRD 227.011699
LSL 21.135151
LTL 3.339674
LVL 0.684157
LYD 6.195796
MAD 10.52072
MDL 19.48332
MGA 5039.842406
MKD 61.468183
MMK 2374.501375
MNT 4041.530788
MOP 9.068939
MRU 44.914235
MUR 50.987711
MVR 17.429352
MWK 1968.185829
MXN 22.181552
MYR 4.879885
MZN 72.386845
NAD 21.134965
NGN 1818.105828
NIO 41.76781
NOK 11.775114
NPR 153.478971
NZD 1.903104
OMR 0.435664
PAB 1.135058
PEN 4.161715
PGK 4.634278
PHP 63.140423
PKR 318.921657
PLN 4.283322
PYG 9090.897642
QAR 4.137039
RON 4.978172
RSD 117.082253
RUB 92.875054
RWF 1630.531373
SAR 4.242185
SBD 9.456983
SCR 16.159791
SDG 679.19036
SEK 10.941983
SGD 1.479816
SHP 0.888822
SLE 25.776321
SLL 23717.378
SOS 648.636209
SRD 41.675561
STD 23410.296838
SVC 9.93188
SYP 14705.147341
SZL 21.11639
THB 37.934602
TJS 11.963469
TMT 3.958649
TND 3.37111
TOP 2.64901
TRY 43.545253
TTD 7.688166
TWD 36.297645
TZS 3042.504187
UAH 47.084415
UGX 4157.818559
USD 1.131043
UYU 47.761967
UZS 14680.23636
VES 98.104333
VND 29412.761034
VUV 136.188163
WST 3.131177
XAF 655.286403
XAG 0.035081
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.056699
XDR 0.814966
XOF 655.300873
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.048983
ZAR 21.065211
ZMK 10180.743151
ZMW 31.582958
ZWL 364.195234
  • CMSC

    -0.2300

    22.01

    -1.04%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2500

    10

    -2.5%

  • SCS

    -0.0900

    9.92

    -0.91%

  • RBGPF

    63.0000

    63

    +100%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    22.3

    -0.22%

  • BTI

    0.6900

    43.55

    +1.58%

  • BP

    -0.6100

    27.46

    -2.22%

  • GSK

    0.8800

    39.85

    +2.21%

  • RIO

    -1.4800

    59.4

    -2.49%

  • NGG

    -0.0400

    73

    -0.05%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.91

    -0.15%

  • RELX

    0.8400

    54.63

    +1.54%

  • BCC

    -1.2200

    93.28

    -1.31%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    9.76

    +1.84%

  • BCE

    0.3300

    22.25

    +1.48%

  • AZN

    0.0800

    71.79

    +0.11%

Inside South Africa's wildlife CSI school helping to catch poachers
Inside South Africa's wildlife CSI school helping to catch poachers / Photo: MARCO LONGARI - AFP

Inside South Africa's wildlife CSI school helping to catch poachers

The rhino lay frozen in the sand, its grey legs stiff, glassy eyes open, horn crudely sawed off.

Text size:

A dead giraffe slumped nearby and a lion's twisted body to the right -- a tableau of devastation.

Three figures in white hazmat suits tip-toed through the dust, marking every footprint. They were not first responders to another poaching tragedy, but students at South Africa's Wildlife Forensic Academy, a training centre aiming to fight poaching by teaching investigation skills to rangers, conservation officers and law enforcement.

Set inside a sunny warehouse in a private game reserve an hour north of Cape Town, the simulated carnage is staged with taxidermised animals, including rhino "Frikkie" who was poached a few years ago.

"The first people who arrive at the crime scene are absolutely crucial," said Phil Snijman, a former prosecutor and trainer at the academy.

"They are the ones who will secure the crime scene. In the absence of the necessary training... that might lead to losing a lot of your available evidence," he said, putting the last touches to an elaborate scene leading the students to a poacher's house in a corner of the warehouse.

South Africa faces an acute poaching crisis, with more than 10,000 rhinos killed since 2007 according to the International Rhino Foundation.

Yet only 36 cases were convicted in court in 2023, according to government figures, in the year almost 500 of the stocky animals were killed.

- 'Entire species disappearing' -

Killings of other species that receive less attention like reptiles and vultures, are even less likely to be prosecuted, said Snijman.

"Police aren't always available to come out, especially for a remote crime scene," he said.

That gap in justice is something Wendy Willson, a former police trainer and conservationist, sees often.

The legal head at Johannesburg's Wildlife Veterinary Hospital said cases of wildlife crime seldom make it to court, and "when they are actually prosecuted, we often end with a lenient sentence".

Willson, who is unaffiliated with the Wildlife Forensic Academy, has dedicated herself to "seeking justice for the little creatures" that don't draw public concern like rhinos and elephants.

"We are in a crisis where we are losing so many of our small animals. Entire species are completely disappearing, and nobody even knows about it," she told AFP.

While "having rangers understand the importance of the chain of custody is very important," she said, it is only one of many challenges to prosecuting wildlife crime -- which include law enforcement resources, community support and prosecutors' awareness of the crimes.

- No silver bullet -

Back at the academy, Mari-Su de Villiers -- wearing a mask and blue plastic gloves -- carefully laid down yellow markers next to each footprint surrounding Frikkie.

At 28, she works to protect endangered African wild dogs -- but it was a case of animal poisoning, and the help of a trained colleague, that led her to the academy.

"They helped our team know what evidence to look out for, anything that seems out of place in a natural environment," she told AFP.

Since opening in 2022, the academy has trained over 500 people but only 89 have been rangers, investigators, or conservation officers like De Villiers.

Much of the intake comes from European students, admits Snijman, noting that their fees help fund sponsorships for local rangers.

Improving the way evidence is gathered, especially forensic material that can stand up in court, will lead to more convictions and serve as a deterrent to future crimes, said Snijman.

"One would hope that you don't need an academy like this because there isn't any wildlife crime out there. This is not a perfect solution, but it is a small part of the bigger picture," he sighed, before returning to the dead rhino to imprint his footprints in the sand.

(H.Schneide--BBZ)