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By AFP
Zimbabwe has sold nearly 100 elephants to China and Dubai
for a total price of $2.7 million over six years, the country’s wildlife agency
said Wednesday, citing overpopulation.
Parks and Wildlife Management Authority spokesman Tinashe
Farawo told AFP Zimbabwe's elephants were overcrowding national parks,
encroaching into human settlements, destroying crops and posing a risk to human
life.
"We have 84,000 elephants against a carrying capacity
of 50,000," he said, justifying the sales. "We believe in sustainable
use of resources, so we sell a few elephants to take care of the rest.
Farawo said 200 people have died in "human-and-animal
conflict" in the past five years, "and at least 7,000 hectares of
crop have been destroyed by elephants".
The animals' natural habitat has been depleted by climate
change, he added, while recurrent droughts have added to strain on the
overburdened national parks, forcing the pachyderms to seek food and water
further afield.
Farawo said money from the legal sales was allocated to
anti-poaching projects, conservation work, research and welfare.
According to the Zimbabwe Chronicle newspaper, 93 elephants
were safely airlifted to parks in China and four to Dubai between 2012 and
2018, They were sold in a price range of between $13,500 and $41,500 each.
Botswana, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe have called for a
global ban on elephant ivory trade to be relaxed due to the growing number of
elephants in some regions.
But over the past decade, the population of elephants across
Africa has fallen by about 111,000 to 415,000, largely due to poaching for
ivory, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
© Agence France-Presse
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