Showing posts with label baby gorillas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baby gorillas. Show all posts

Sunday, 25 March 2012

Orphaned gorilla trafficking in Congo

The illegal trafficking of gorillas continues in Congo
March 2012. The Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund International is currently working, in an organized effort with the Congolese nature authorities (ICCN) to rescue three orphaned infant gorillas in the Walikale territory of the Democratic Republic of Congo. These confiscations will bring the total toll up to seven rescued orphaned infants within the last 11 months in this region of eastern Africa. 

Rescue attempts in an unstable region
The first young gorilla was allegedly held captive in a Congolese man's home for 12 weeks, while he searched for an interested buyer. During his search, the suspect contacted a Congolese government police inspector who informed the man of the consequences of perpetuating the illegal trade of endangered animals. The suspected trafficker agreed to surrender the infant to a gorilla conservation organization. 

Rebel groups
A team was assembled, supported by the Fossey Fund and consisting of ICCN rangers to orchestrate the confiscation -- a risky endeavour due to the instability of the region. The first confiscation attempt in February was unsuccessful because of local fighting among rebel groups. The team then travelled to Luvungi, one of the Mpofi villages in the Wanyanga sector (around 65 kilometres from Walikale) to attempt the rescue mission. Unfortunately, the village was pillaged by rebels and the infant gorilla was taken to another village when his captor fled.
Bushmeat
The mission did yield some positive results however. An infant chimpanzee was rescued, and is now in the care of ICCN staff in Goma. The ICCN agent also documented bushmeat being sold in the Mpofi market. "This clearly shows the urgency of the anti-poaching investment we have been advocating" says Fossey Fund Vice President of Africa Programs Juan Carlos Bonilla. Additionally, the report included a recommendation for a "conservation radio" in the Walikale area, to improve communications and help strengthen conservation efforts.
Two more orphaned gorillas
One week after the infant was reported in Mpofi, the Fossey Fund was notified that a second and third orphaned infant were being held captive in Masisi, some 150 kilometres from the Mpofi area. Confiscation attempts of all three infants have so far been unsuccessful because of civil unrest in the region.
http://www.wildlifeextra.com/go/news/congo-gorilla-trafficking.html 

Friday, 23 March 2012

Baby gorilla death prompts bi-national poaching patrols

The death of a baby mountain gorilla has prompted Rwanda andDemocratic Republic of Congo to launch joint anti-poaching patrols to protect the endangered species, an official said Wednesday.
Prosper Uwingeli, a conservationist in Rwanda's Volcanoes National Park, which abuts the Virunga National Park in DR Congo, said the patrols were launched March 12 and had already destroyed several poaching traps.
Baby gorillas frequently fall victim to traps, even if they are not the species being hunted.
"These joint patrols were agreed upon following the death in a trap of a baby gorilla in February," Uwingeli said.
Mountain gorilla populations have been decimated by conflict and poaching. The creatures were famously brought to the world's attention by the late Dian Fossey, and are one of the region's main tourist attractions and foreign currency earners.
Rwanda charges $750 to foreign tourists for a permit to visit the primates.
Only about 700 mountain gorillas survive in the wild, with half of them concentrated in the Virunga massif that straddles the border between Rwanda, DR Congo and Uganda.
The critically endangered species is also found at a second location in Uganda, in the Bwindi Impenetrable Forest.

Sunday, 4 September 2011

Traffickers in baby gorilla arrested in Congo

Key members of trafficking ring September 2011: Congo Wildlife Authorities have arrested two men believed to be key members of a baby mountain gorilla trafficking group. The arrests follow an undercover investigation by Virunga National Park rangers and other Congolese government security services. The two men, arrested in Goma, have been charged with illegal trafficking an endangered species.

The operation followed the recovery of a baby mountain gorilla last month by the Rwandan Police. The gorilla was seized in the Rwandan border town of Gisenyi , from traffickers believed to be coming from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

Only 790 mountain gorillas left in wildCongo Wildlife Authorities have been working closely with Rwandan authorities to dismantle the baby gorilla trafficking ring that passes through eastern Congo for sale in Rwanda. Baby gorilla trafficking is considered to be one of the greatest threats to the survival of the critically endangered mountain gorillas, of which only 790 remain in the world.

From Rumangabo in Virunga National Park, the park director Emmanuel de Merode said: ‘The arrests are the outcome of a coordinated effort by Rwandan and Congolese law enforcement authorities. While we are pleased to have brought this group of traffickers to justice, we remain worried by what appears to be a significant and growing demand for baby mountain gorillas.'
Conservation successThe effort to protect the mountain gorilla populations in Congo, Rwanda and Uganda represent one of the greatest conservation successes in recent times, with a population that has more than doubled in the past 25 years. However, the threats remain high, both for the gorillas and for those who protect them. More than 130 Congolese rangers have died protecting Virunga National Park over that same period.
 The recently rescued one-year-old female gorilla appears to be in good health, according to veterinarians from Mountain Gorilla Veterinarian Project (MGVP), partners of Virunga National Park. The infant will complete a 30-day quarantine at an orphan-care facility in Kinigi Rwanda before moving to Virunga's Senkwekwe Center to join the four orphan mountain gorillas Maisha, Kaboko, Ndeze and Ndakasi. Senkwekwe is home to the only orphan mountain gorillas in the world.
http://www.wildlifeextra.com/go/news/gorilla-trafficking.html#cr


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