Google – AFP, 17 January 2014
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Two white
rhinos are pictured at Johannesburg Zoo on July 25, 2013
(AFP/File, Stephane de
Sakutin)
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Johannesburg
— More than 1,000 rhinos were poached in South Africa last year, a 50 percent
increase from 2012, fuelled by the black-market demand for their horns, the
government said Friday.
"The
total number of rhino poached in South Africa during 2013 increased to
1,004," the environment ministry announced in a statement.
Asian
demand for rhino horn -- prized as a status symbol and wrongly thought to
possess medicinal properties -- has fuelled an ever more intense onslaught on
the animals.
South
Africa is home to around 80 percent of the world's rhino population, estimated
at more than 25,000.
In 2007
only 13 rhinoceroses were reported hunted illegally in South Africa, but since
then the numbers have increased exponentially every year.
Despite
drone and foot patrols, poachers appear to stay ahead of the security forces.
Already a
total of 37 rhino have been poached in the first two-and-half weeks of this
year.
The famous
Kruger National Park bordering Mozambique has taken the brunt of the poaching
scourge.
Sophisticated
transnational criminal organisations illegally hunt the animals and hack off
their horns which are then smuggled out of the country to Asia.
A total of
343 arrests were made in the past year for poaching.

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