Thursday, 26 December 2013

Dominik's account of Christmas eve 2012 and reflections on the struggle

I thought I would post Dominik's account of last Christmas eve - this year he was away from the reserve and consumed by worry and a sense of defeat...

After a month of relative quiet and the capture of some big-time poachers (and their immediate release without prosecution) we are in the line of fire again.

Christmas Eve 2012, 16:00 hours, and I am sitting on the steps of the old house, overlooking the magnificent coastal forest in the clear afternoon light below. While I was out with the Elders and Chiefton to clean the graves and pray for rain and peace, the killers were already zeroing in on their pray......

For over 16 yrs we have now been in the hard knuckle business of community conservation against overwhelming odds. Taking on the timber giants of the day in the late 90’s, the ever more prominent snaring fraternity throughout, fighting bush fires and banditary. From 2004 to 2008 an almost impossible struggle against Chinese logging of a scale unknown before.

The first ever fine to be paid since the creation of the park for illegal logging was a truck captured by us and followed by several more (released without a fine). Seeing community relations plummet and agitation and defamation soar through our success. Being hailed and damned, shunned and consulted. All this has passed but now, in this time of drought we face our biggest challenge yet, the unopposed slaughter of our elephants by all means under the sun but predominantly by the use of automatic weapons of war. Facing the same mafia as before only now their agents are armed with machine guns not chainsaws and use helicopters not trucks.

Someone told me that wildlife crime is now bigger then trade in illegal arms and right up there with drugs and human trafficking.

As the blood moon rises into the afternoon sky and we finish at the graves the poachers are getting into position to open fire regardless of their target. The wounding or killing of a calf will most likely lead to being able to kill the mother trying to protect her child. Perhaps they even get to kill the aunt who may try to shield the youngster from further harm. Entire family clans have been eradicated like this. I hear of stories from Bilibiza and Taratibu where this has happened. Many herds are now without a cow or sizable bull, only adolescents and juveniles left to their own, inadequate, devices,

Blurred flashes of recent memory, my distant family. As I said this is Christmas Eve 2012 in the afternoon. I had just taken photographs of the rising ¾ full moon when the news came in excess of 75 rounds of AK fire reported at the mountain some 3km from the house. 

The news came as a shock wave, as it always does – “get your head together”, “assess your capacity and possibilities”, “what time is it?”, “who can I take and how will we locate the site?”. It is a moment of electrifying intensity and deep hurt as the knowledge sets in that the damage is done, and that over 70 rounds rarely miss their target. Déjà vu images of dead cows come to mind, their babies near, hacked out faces, and the air of desperate confusion giving way to a morgue like silence. Got to move!

We race to gather some men and set off, but this turns out to be more difficult then expected. The destructive and decomposing influence of the chief park ranger, (in my absence) showed effect. Six rangers refused to go, having been told not to pursue armed poachers and not to go into the bush the same day as the incidence! So, I ended up with two, Ali and Juma, and we climbed the mountain to observe the bush from above and, as we were told the shooting was near, we settled in. Not before long, approximately one hour, we heard the terrible sound of axe on bone. This made a rough estimate of position possible. The need for action was like the force of a decompression chamber but it would have been seriously unwise to enter the bush at such a late stage and stoking around the dark for heavily armed bandits. All we could do so late in the day was to sit and listen once we had gotten into position. When hearing the axe (hacking into the skull to retrieve the ivory) we took aim and fired several vollies into the bush. The killers hurried away with their loot but possibly a little surprised to be noticed at all.

1 comment:

  1. Just found your blog - thanks for sharing. Phew, hectic. Empathise with you re all the opposition to any anti poaching efforts. How many eles did they get? Was in Pemba in 99 and the logging even then was awful to see.

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