Mozambique to destroy ivory, rhino horns

More than a tonne of confiscated ivory and rhino horn will be destroyed by authorities in Mozambique as a blow against poaching, a conservation group says.

A file image of soldiers destroying elephant ivory tusks (AP Photo/Joel Bouopda Tatou, File)

A file image of soldiers destroying elephant ivory tusks (AP Photo/Joel Bouopda Tatou, File) Source: AP

Mozambique plans to destroy more than one tonne of confiscated ivory as well as 53 rhino horns to show its resolve in the fight against poaching, a New York-based conservation group says.

Citing Mozambican authorities, the Wildlife Conservation Society said on Saturday that the destruction of the stockpile will happen Monday in Maputo, the capital.

Some 340 elephant tusks and 65 rhino horns were seized in a May 12 raid in the southern city of Matola, said the conservation group, which co-manages Niassa National Reserve, a major wildlife park in Mozambique.

Ten days later, 12 of the horns were stolen from a police warehouse, and at least four officers suspected of involvement in the theft were arrested.

Authorities are investigating whether the rhino horns came from neighbouring South Africa, where rhino poaching has surged in recent years to meet growing demand for the horn in parts of Asia.

The rhino population in South Africa's Kruger National Park is frequently targeted by poachers who cross over from Mozambique. Experts believe Mozambique's rhino population has been virtually wiped out.

The demand for rhino horn is based partly on a belief that it has medicinal benefits. There is no scientific evidence to support that: the horn is made of keratin, a protein also found in human fingernails.

In May, conservationists said the number of elephants in Mozambique had dropped nearly 50 per cent to about 10,300 in the last five years because of poaching.


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Source: AAP

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