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Elephants
shot in Chirundu
Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force (ZCTF)
October 15, 2006
We have received reports from disgusted and heartbroken tourists
about elephants being shot by National Parks staff in Chirundu.
Some South African tourists have vowed never to come back here.
On the one hand, Zimbabwe is trying to promote tourism and on the
other, destroying any chances of reviving it.
In the first case,
an elephant killed the caretaker of a safari camp so National Parks
shot it in full view of tourists who were visiting the neighbouring
camp. The local people believed the wrong elephant had been shot.
Soon afterwards, an employee of the neighbouring camp was attacked
and almost killed by an elephant so that elephant was also shot
by National Parks and it was found to have a wound on its head so
it is believed that this was the same elephant that killed the caretaker.
It is believed that the first elephant was shot in error.
On the 2nd September,
the caretaker of a safari camp had too much to drink, stole the
company vehicle and then walked into an elephant which killed him.
The next day, this elephant was shot by National Parks, again in
very close proximity to a safari camp so that tourists witnessed
the killing. They say that the elephant was shot 16 times before
it finally died.
A few days later,
another elephant was shot. Upon enquiries, a National Parks official
in Chirundu replied that this elephant was shot because it was causing
problems with truckers. However, a junior official said that this
was the elephant that had killed the caretaker and the first one
shot, with 16 bullets, had been the wrong one.
A fifth elephant
was shot, apparently because it knocked over a phone booth. It is
reported that it took 40 bullets to kill this one. The following
is an eye witness account of the incident:
To Whom it may
concern
At approx 5.30
pm on 3/9/06 I was sitting at my outside table, overlooking the
Chirundu floodplain below me.
Suddenly what
sounded like an AK 47 rifle fired 4-5 shots in rapid succession.
I jumped up to see what the comotion was about. Right below me I
saw an elephant stumble whilst trying to run away.
It collapsed onto
its front knees, with what appeared to me, having being shot in
its knee caps, disabling it from running further, still trying to
scramble away.I then saw a national parks member shooting at random,
up to a further 40 shots into the elephant. After approx 7 minutes
the elephant fell over on its side, and a heavy calibre weapon was
heard to fire a single shot.
The reason I write
this is as follows:-
- 3-4 years ago
the flood plain below me teamed with game, today you are lucky
to see an impala down there over a week period.
- This elephant
of today apparently damaged a phone booth and was murdered. In
the past they would be frightened off with fire crackers or gun
shots into the air. Now Zero tolerance.
- My domestic
staff tell me this is the 9th elephant to die like this this year
in Chirundu, on more than two occassions the wrong one being shot.
- My domestic
worker gave me 4kg elephant meat to take home to his wife 10 days
ago when the 8th elephant was shot, after apparently killing a
drunk person. Apparently the 7th elephant was shot by mistake
, the 8th being the culprit. This meat he paid $ 1200 for and
was not issued a receipt. The large parks ranger was seen at the
local bar that night in a very inebriated state.!!!
- The Zambezi
valley is a wilderness area. The loss of game here has to be seen
to be believed - national parks are entrusted to look after our
wildlife heritage - which they are not. ! The callous and inhumane
way they are despatching the game here is appalling and under
brutal conditions - they just dont care.
Finally I wish
to appeal to you to investigate this random slaughter that is now
reaching endemic proportions, 30 km away from Mana Pools , a national
heritage site.
Johnny Rodrigues
Chairman for Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force
Visit the ZCTF fact
sheet
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