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DSWF - ILLEGAL TRADE INVESTIGATIONS AND KAZIRANGA RHINO AND TIGER PROJECTS   PROJECT: ILLEGAL TRADE INVESTIGATIONS AND KAZIRANGA RHINO AND TIGER PROJECTS
  Location: ASSAM, INDIA
  DSWF Support: Since 1994
  Funding to date: £62,000
 
  Project Summary: These two projects work together to save one of the last surviving populations of Indian one-horned rhinos and wild tigers, working in Assam's largely forgotten wildlife reserves, including Kaziranga.
     
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Project update - April 2007

Send a letter/email to India’s Prime Minister, click here...
 
Read worldwide breaking news on the latest casualties of India’s poaching rampage, click here...

Dead rhinoDSWF's partner in Assam, Dr Bibhab Talukdar, reports that the last two weeks have tragically seen a renewed poaching assault on the Indian greater one-horned rhino in Kaziranga National Park, resulting in the deaths of four animals.

Kaziranga has had a remarkable anti-poaching record over the last five years with rhino casualties dropping from around 70 annually in the '90s to only two or three animals a year recently. Kaziranga currently holds an estimated 1,855 of the critically endangered rhino, ¾ of the world's total population. Apart from two other parks in Assam, the rhinos are now only found in Nepal where there are an estimated 300-400 animals in the Chitwan National Park. This park, however, has recently seen a surge of poaching incidents with the loss of 10 animals in the last 6 months of 2006.

Dr Talukdar reports:

"The future of rhinos is not safe in Kaziranga unless the Indian government gives urgent attention to filling up the shortage in frontline staff in the national park. Kaziranga is spread over 430 square km (165 square miles), and needs a total of 500 forest guards to protect it, but currently has only around half that number. The protection regime in and outside the national park is not therefore running at full strength and if this problem is not solved urgently, and additional rhinos are poached, then the situation will get worse as the morale of the staff will go down in the face of the renewed poaching activity.

Forest guards often patrol on bare feet, armed with obsolete rifles, while poachers are equipped with modern firearms like automatic rifles. Poachers know the weakness of the forest guards and they are taking advantage of it. They are now simply shooting the rhinos instead of earlier, more stealthy, methods such as electrocution.

This matter was taken up with the Assam Forest Minister in a meeting held on 17th March 2007 and he has assured us that additional front line staff would be sent to Kaziranga soon."

"We are now making arrangements to rush additional forest guards to Kaziranga to stop poaching," said the Minister, Rockybul Hussain.

The rhinos are threatened because of the increasing demand for their horns in traditional medicines throughout China and Asia. The horns currently fetch up to $10,000 per kilo on the international market.

To find out more about the Kaziranga project click here...

 

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