Poachers kill famous mountain gorilla in Uganda as 1,790 poaching suspects arrested in Namibia

Poachers kill famous mountain gorilla in Uganda as 1,790 poaching suspects arrested in Namibia
Rafiki  was the oldest to ever be habituated in the country

Rafiki was the oldest to ever be habituated in the country

KAMPALA/WINDHOEK, June 13 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Four men are in police custody in Uganda suspected to have killed a well-known silverback mountain gorilla in the south-western Bwindi Impenetrable National Park.

Rafiki was the head of a 17-member group, the oldest to ever be habituated in the country.

There are at least 19 such groups in Uganda, each one led by a male silverback.

Rafiki, estimated to be 25 years old, was reported missing on June 1 and his body found the following day. He had been injured in the upper left part of the abdomen.

According to a statement from the Uganda Wildlife Authority, the suspects claim they were out hunting, when they came across Rafiki and his group. It then charged at them, and one of the men speared it in self-defence.

Officials say hunting tools, including snares and spears, were recovered from one of the suspects’ homes.

The suspects are awaiting appearance in court.

Uganda is home to more than half of the just over 1,000 surviving mountain gorillas.

The endangered species are found in the country’s Bwindi Impenetrable National Park and Mghahinga National Park, as well as the Democratic Republic of Congo’s Virunga and Rwanda’s Volcanoes National Park.

Habituated mountain gorillas, unlike their wild counterparts, are used to human presence around them making gorilla tracking a valuable tourism experience and a key income earner for the region.

Separately, Namibia arrested more than 1,790 suspected poachers of high valued and iconic species such as rhino and elephant at the end of 2018 up to May 2020.

The Minister of Environment, Forestry, and Tourism, Pohamba Shifeta announced this when he presented the ministry’s budget for the 2020/21 financial year to the national assembly for approval.

“The arrested suspects doubled than ever before since the launch of the Anti Poaching Unit in 2016,” he added.

Meanwhile, Shifeta said poaching and instances of human-wildlife conflict continue to be major challenges facing the Ministry when it comes to wildlife conservation. — NNN-AGENCIES

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