Yahoo – AFP,
11 April 2014
Washington (AFP) - A small team of US Marines are to head soon to Chad's Zakouma National Park to train local forces in the fight against the poaching threatening the area's elephant herds.
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| Anti-poaching team patrols in Zakouma National Park, Chad, on February 25, 2014 (AFP Photo/Marco Longari) |
Washington (AFP) - A small team of US Marines are to head soon to Chad's Zakouma National Park to train local forces in the fight against the poaching threatening the area's elephant herds.
Around 15
marines are to arrive in the Central African country by the end of April and
will stay for around a month, a military official said.
The troops
will train a group of approximately 100 rangers from the Chadian environment
ministry's mobile brigade tasked with tracking poachers.
The marines
will train the Chadian rangers on small unit tactics and patrolling, shooting
and navigation.
"These
skills will help prevent poaching, investigate incidents and pursue
criminals," the Marine Corps said in a statement.
An increase
in poaching in Zakouma has led to a sharp decline in the elephant population --
from 4,000 in 2005 to 450 just five years later -- according to the African
Parks conservation group.
In February,
authorities incinerated a ton of ivory confiscated from poachers in the park.
The price
of a kilogram of ivory has surpassed $2,000 on the Asian black market, with
demand constantly rising, according to several conservation groups.
Central
African countries are exploited by vast poaching operations organized by armed
groups which take advantage of gaps in border security, allowing illicit goods
to pass from country to country.
According
to a 2013 report from the World Wildlife Fund, at about $19 billion a year,
poaching has become the world's fourth largest illegal market, after drugs,
fake currency and human trafficking.
The marines
sent to Chad will come from a special unit assigned to the NATO base in
Signoella, Italy. The Special-Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force conducts
cooperation missions in Africa.

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