Poachers have killed 28 endangered forest elephants in the Nki and Lobeke national parks in southeast Cameroon in recent weeks
With demand for ivory rising from Asia, poachers have reduced the
population of Africa’s forest elephants by 62 percent over the last
decade, putting the species on track for extinction, conservationists
say.
The parks of southeast Cameroon, along with parts of the Democratic
Republic of Congo and Gabon, have some of the last significant
populations of forest elephants.
“Elephants in these two protected areas in the Congo Basin are facing
a threat to their existence,” said Zacharie Nzooh, WWF Cameroon
representative in the East Region.
Nzooh said that between February 10 and March 1, WWF found the
carcasses of 23 elephants, stripped of their tusks, deep in the Nki
national park. A further five were found without their tusks in the
Lobeke national park, further to the east.
“The poachers used automatic weapons, such as AK-47s, reflecting the
violent character of elephant poaching,” he said, adding that park
wardens lacked good weapons.
Smaller than its African savannah cousin, the forest elephant has
straighter tusks. If urgent measures are not taken, Cameroon’s forest
elephants, estimated to number about 2,000, could disappear in less than
a decade, Nzooh said.
Ivory sells for hundreds of dollars per kilogram on the black market.
Most is smuggled to Asia, especially China, to be carved into jewelry
and ornaments.
In early 2012, heavily armed poachers on horseback from Chad and
Sudan massacred some 200 savannah elephants in Cameroon’s Bouba Ndjida
National Park.
In December, Cameroon deployed military helicopters and 600 soldiers
equipped with night vision gear to try to protect the park and its
wildlife.
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