Breeders take South Africa to court over rhino ban

RHINO breeders and game ­reserve owners have taken the South African government to court to try to overturn its ban on the domestic trade of rhino horn.
South Africa, home to 90 per cent of the worlds rhinos, has had a ban on horn trade since 2009. Picture: AFP/Getty ImagesSouth Africa, home to 90 per cent of the worlds rhinos, has had a ban on horn trade since 2009. Picture: AFP/Getty Images
South Africa, home to 90 per cent of the worlds rhinos, has had a ban on horn trade since 2009. Picture: AFP/Getty Images

They view rhino horn as a renewable resource and maintain that harvesting the horn from the living rhinos at their ranches and selling it legally will drive poachers currently slaughtering the endangered animals out of business.

“It is in the public interest that the moratorium be lifted and that private rhino owners be able to trade rhino horn in South Africa,” said Izak du Toit, a lawyer representing one of the rhino owners in the civil court case filed last week.

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The South African government enacted a ban on the domestic trade of rhino horn in 2009 after poaching caused populations to plummet. An international ban on rhino horn has been in place since 1977.

The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (Cites), which oversees the trade of wild animals and plants, announced last week that it will hold its next meeting in Johannesburg in September 2016. At the last Cites meeting two years ago, South Africa proposed that lifting the international ban be put on the table for discussion in 2016.

“While the government continues to do study after study after study, we are losing rhinos,” said du Toit.

Some rhino experts have mixed views about lifting the ban.

“There are strong arguments as to why it may be detrimental, and there are strong arguments why it could be good,” said Richard Emslie, of the African Rhino Specialist Group.

Breeders say dehorning is quick and painless, similar to trimming a horse’s hoof. Rhinos grow about 1-2lbs (up to a kilogram) of horn a year, which would give owners up to ten harvestable horns within an animal’s lifetime. A DNA database to track rhino horn exists.

Rhinoceros horns are highly prized in Asia, where it is considered a status symbol and cure for a range of ailments, from cancer to hangovers though there is no evidence it has any use in that capacity. Demand is so great that consumers pay more for it than they do for gold or cocaine. Harvesting horns would make live rhinos more valuable than dead ones and drive prices down, ­reducing incentives to poach, ­according to breeders.

“This is supported by greed, not conservation,” says Allison Thomson of Outraged South African Citizens Against Poaching, who says breeders just want to offload their stockpiles and that a legal trade would be riddled with corruption.

The demand for rhino horn has fuelled a catastrophic increase in rhino poaching in South Africa, going from 13 cases in 2007 to 1,215 in 2014, according to the government. South Africa is home to approximately 90 per cent of the world’s rhinos.

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