TIME Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe Is Removing the Horns of Its Rhino to Stop Them From Being Poached

TO GO WITH AFP STORY BY JUSTINE GERARDY
DESMOND KWANDE—AFP/Getty Images In this file photo from October 8, 2010, workers from the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) go through a process of de-horning a rhino in Chipinge National Park in Zimbabwe.

Fifty rhino were killed for their horns in Zimbabwe last year, double the number killed in 2014

Zimbabwe is set to employ a new strategy to ensuring that dozens of rhino in its national parks are protected from poachers: it is removing their sought-after horns.

At least 100 rhino in state-run parks across the African country will be dehorned, a conservation group was quoted as saying by Reuters on Tuesday.

“We want to send a message to poachers that they will not get much if they come to Zimbabwe,” said Lisa Maribini, director of operations at Aware Trust Zimbabwe, one of two organizations assisting the government in dehorning the animals.

Another 600-odd rhino reside in private game reserves, which may or may not choose to dehorn the animals, she added.

Similar measures were taken in 2010.

Poaching is a major problem in Africa, with conservation groups estimating that a record 1,305 rhino were killed across the continent last year. Of those, 50 were killed in Zimbabwe, the World Wildlife Fund said, double that of the previous year.

[Reuters]

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