Shock at rise in rhino poaching in South Africa in 2023

  Picture by Matthias Mullie.

499 rhinos were killed for their horns by poachers in South Africa in 2023. An increase on the poaching numbers for 2022 – a major disappointment writes Keith Somerville.

In 2023, 499 rhinos were killed for their horns by poachers in South Africa. This is 51 up on the poaching numbers for 2022 and is a major disappointment as the national environment ministry and SANParks, which runs parks like Kruger, had hoped for a reduced level of poaching. It is a worrying sign that the South African government, wildlife and law enforcement authorities have not got poaching under control. Releasing the annual poaching figures, the Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, Barbara Creecy said that poaching in Kruger was down but the new hotspot for poaching was KwaZulu-Natal, “The pressure again has been felt in the KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) province with Hluhluwe-iMfolozi Park facing the brunt of poaching cases,” with 307 of the 499 killed there, she said.

In Kruger NP, 78 rhino were killed in 2023, compared with 124 in 2022 – a decrease due to better anti-poaching measures, careful vetting of staff in the park and the dehorning of many of the rhinos, but also because there is a much smaller rhino population due 13 years of heavy poaching. White rhino numbers in Kruger have fallen from 10,621 in Kruger in 2011 to 1,988 at the end of 2022; black rhino down from 415 in 2013 to 208 at the end of 2022.

KZN is now the main focus for poaching gangs. The 307 poached in 2023 in Hluhluwe-iMfolozi alone, was the ‘highest poaching loss within this province’ recorded for any one year, according to Environment Minister Creecy. The increased level of poaching compared with 93 poached in 2020 and the jump to 244 in 2022 (228 on reserves and 16 privately-owned).

KZN and Hluhluwe-iMfolozi have a number of problems which make poaching easier, now that security has been tightened in Kruger. Cedric Coetzee, head of rhino protection at Hluhluwe-iMfolozi in KZN, told me when I visited him there in 2016 that while it might take poachers days to track a rhino in Kruger, the high density of animals in the KwaZulu-Natal reserves meant they might only spend two to three hours there before killing a rhino and escaping with its horns. The upsurge in poaching in KZN demonstrates how the accessibility of rhino in reserves like Hluluwe-iMfolozi exposes them to poaching as gangs moved in.

KZN is a province beset by corruption, and both political and criminal violence, with violent factional struggles within the governing African National Congress Party. Corruption in provincial government, law enforcement and the judiciary is rife. The major example of this has been the investigation and suspension of KZN Regional Court President Eric Nzimande following accusations of corrupt payments, racketeering and receiving bribes to appoint unsuitable candidates as attorneys in cases.

The Save the Wild NGO had campaigned for his suspension believing him to have been key in obstructive cases against suspected rhino poaching kingpins – kingpins being the term used to describe the leaders of highly organised poaching syndicates, which are often involved, too, in drug dealing, cash-in-transit heists and armed robberies. Nzimande was charged with offences related to corruption and is awaiting trial. Implicated in his crimes is Z.W. Ngwenya, who represented the suspected rhino poaching kingpin Dumisani Gwala in his court appearances. Gwala was arrested in 2014 on rhino poaching charges. Over a period of nine years there were 30 postponements of his trial after a series of objections by his defence team. In July 2023, a magistrate dismissed the case against him, declaring him not guilty on the poaching charges on the basis that evidence presented by the prosecutors was for some reason not admissible, though he did receive a suspended sentence and a small fine for resisting arrest.

The corruption, incompetence and often political interference in cases means that those at the top of the poaching syndicates escape justice or spend years on bail, during which time they can continue directing the poachers on the ground. With 307 rhinos killed in just one reserve in KZN 2023, and 325 in the province as a whole, KZN recorded only 49 arrests and 13 seizures of illegal weapons, and these were low-level poachers not the gang leaders. Work has been done to end corruption within Kruger staff, with more integrity testing of employees and those applying for park jobs, but ending corruption within Kruger, Hluhluwe-iMfolozi and other parks or reserves is crucial to reducing poaching in the long-term, as 40-70% of Kruger’s anti-poaching and law enforcement staff are thought ‘to be aiding poaching networks or involved in corrupt or criminal activities in some way including high levels of fuel theft’.

Police and judicial corruption and the role of provincial ANC postholders as godfathers of a diversity of crimes makes this criminal nut a very hard one to crack. The ability of the criminal syndicates not just to frustrate investigations but to kill lead investigators was demonstrated by the assassination of Hawks (an elite organised crime unit of the South African Police) investigator Lt-Col Leroy Brewer in March 2020 – he was a key figure in fighting organised crime.

The new poaching figures are terrible and a worrying sign that there is a long way to go to bring poaching under control and start to provide sufficient security for rhino numbers to recover. Anti-poaching measures are important but the major threat is the high level of corruption within the political, law enforcement, wildlife and judicial agencies and, one must not forget, the crushing levels of poverty, unemployment and dire living conditions of millions of South Africans which provides a ready pool of young men desperate to improve their lives who can be tempted by the cash offered to poach by the kingpins, who are able to act with impunity.

Professor Keith Somerville of Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology (DICE), his book Africa’s Rhinos, Africa’s Threatened Rhinos, will be published January 2025.

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