Friday, October 9, 2015



Contact your Congress. 
Tell them to oppose: The Sportsmen’s Heritage and Recreational Enhancement (SHARE) Act of 2015 (H.R. 2406) 

You can find your U.S.A. senator email contacts here:
U.S.A. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
EMAIL ADDRESS CONTACTS
http://www.house.gov/

You can find your U.S.A. House of Representative email contacts here:
U.S.A. SENATE
EMAIL ADDRESS CONTACTS
http://www.house.gov/representatives/find/

If you prefer to make contact via phone, your 
U.S.A. senator phone contacts are here:
U.S.A. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
PHONE NUMBER CONTACTS
http://www.house.gov/representatives/

If you prefer to make contact via phone, your 
U.S.A. representative phone contacts are here:
U.S.A. SENATE
PHONE NUMBER CONTACTS
http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm


Pro-Trophy Hunting, Pro-Trapping, 
Pro-Lead Ammo Bill Sees Action Tomorrow in House Committee




The SHARE Act, if it passes, would be a sweetheart deal for 41 trophy hunters pleading for a Congressional carve-out to import the trophies of polar bears they previously killed in Canada. 
Photo by iStockphoto


The timing itself suggests an extraordinary degree of tone-deafness. Just weeks after the Walter Palmer trophy-hunting escapade in Zimbabwe http://blog.humanesociety.org/wayne/2015/07/cecil-lion-killed-by-trophy-hunter.html?credit=blog_post_100715_id7591 made international headlines, and the day after MSNBC releases a damning anti-trophy hunting documentary called Blood Lions, the U.S. House Natural Resources Committee is poised to provide a legislative gift bag to the trophy-hunting and trapping lobbies.

The Sportsmen’s Heritage and Recreational Enhancement (SHARE) Act of 2015 (H.R. 2406) http://blog.humanesociety.org/wayne/2015/05/sportsmens-act-in-house.html?credit=blog_post_100715_id7591 is about many things, but it is not about helping the rank-and-file sportsman.

In part, it is about appeasing the one percent of hunters who are into international trophy killing – men like Walter Palmer, who fork over big dollars to travel the world and kill the rarest, most majestic creatures. The bill promises a sweetheart deal for 41 trophy hunters pleading for a congressional carve-out to import the trophies of polar bears http://www.humanesociety.org/animals/polar_bears/?credit=blog_post_100715_id7591 they previously killed in Canada. These hunters rushed to Canada, despite repeated warnings that they wouldn’t be allowed to bring their kills into the country because of the Bush Administration’s pending “threatened” listing for polar bears under the Endangered Species Act, and paid as much as $50,000 each to hunt these bears in the hope of bringing rare polar bear trophies home. These hunters — many of whom, like Walter Palmer, hunted lions and other majestic species around the globe — believed that they could use their political power to receive a congressional bailout to import these 41 dead polar bears, and many in the House Natural Resources Committee seem intent on proving them right.

After Walter Palmer’s lion-shooting gambit, 44 airlines said they won’t transport trophies from lions, leopards, elephants, rhinos, or Cape buffalo. http://blog.humanesociety.org/wayne/2015/08/more-airlines-say-no-to-trophy-hunters.html?credit=blog_post_100715_id7591 I imagine that if they got the grisly details of these Arctic-area polar bear hunts, they wouldn’t much want to transport those trophies either. The American public is also overwhelmingly opposed to trophy hunting and trophy imports, according to a new Remington Research Group survey, http://www.humanesociety.org/news/press_releases/2015/10/poll-americans-oppose-trophy-hunting-100715.html?credit=blog_post_100715_id7591 which found that two thirds of Americans oppose trophy hunting and 74 percent oppose the “canned hunts,” which Blood Lions exposes as the source of so many American trophy hunters’ kills.

This bill is also about poaching http://www.humanesociety.org/issues/poaching/?credit=blog_post_100715_id7591 – and preventing the government from stopping it. Specifically, the bill seeks to block a rule-making action by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to crack down on the commercial trade in ivory. President Obama announced this provision http://blog.humanesociety.org/wayne/2015/07/obama-announces-landmark-ivory-trade-ban.html?credit=blog_post_100715_id7591 on his recent trip to Africa, noting that demand for ivory has contributed to an African elephant poaching crisis of epic proportions – more than 100,000 elephants were killed from 2010 to 2012. More recently, Obama and the President of China agreed to collaborate on a plan to stop commercial trade http://blog.humanesociety.org/wayne/2015/09/china-us-pledge-to-end-ivory-trade.html?credit=blog_post_100715_id7591 and prevent elephants from going the way of the woolly mammoth. If the SHARE Act passes, it would bring the Administration’s efforts to curb the U.S. ivory trade to a screeching halt. It’s hard to fathom that serious-minded people could support such a provision – and the selfishness of subverting the global community’s effort to crack down on this problem is breathtaking..

The bill has other terrible provisions to promote cruel commercial trapping on federal lands, to bar federal agencies from regulating toxic lead ammunition http://www.humanesociety.org/issues/campaigns/wildlife_abuse/toxic-lead-ammunition-poisoning-wildlife.html?credit=blog_post_100715_id7591 that poisons wildlife, and to grant bow hunters access to our national parks. The whole bill, with one ugly provision after another, is rotten to its core. But apparently because the NRA and Safari Club International want it, a large number of lawmakers will genuflect and give them what they want.

Some lawmakers, notably Representatives Raúl Grijalva, D-AZ, and Don Beyer, D-VA, are poised to offer amendments during Thursday’s committee markup to remove some of the most heinous language in the bill. It is shocking that, at a time when the House Natural Resources Committee should be protecting endangered species from trophy hunters and helping the United States fight the ivory trade, it is doing precisely the opposite. It is almost surreal, and it is one of the biggest bright-line indicators that the trophy-hunting lobby has captured a major faction of the United States Congress.

Sunday, September 27, 2015


Beautiful!
Thank you, President Barack Obama.

HISTORIC: The World Just Took One Huge Step Forward For Elephants


In a move already being hailed as " historic," U.S. President Barack Obama and China's President Xi Jinping agreed to ban ivory sales in their respective countries on Friday.


"The United States and China commit to enact nearly complete bans on ivory import and export, including significant and timely restrictions on the import of ivory as hunting trophies, and to take significant and timely steps to halt the domestic commercial trade of ivory," the White House stated in a fact sheet released Friday . 
"The two sides decided to further cooperate in joint training, technical exchanges, information sharing, and public education on combating wildlife trafficking, and enhance international law enforcement cooperation in this field. The United States and China decided to cooperate with other nations in a comprehensive effort to combat wildlife trafficking."

The announcement marks the first high-level commitment by Xi to end ivory sales in China, the world's largest market, and follows a pledge made by Chinese officials in May to phase out the domestic legal trade, WildAid http://www.wildaid.org/ said in a statement they released immediately following the announcement. The U.S. is the world's second largest market for ivory.

While international ivory trading has been banned since 1989, the legal domestic trade of ivory in Hong Kong, China, Thailand, Vietnam and the U.S. has had a hand in feeding a poaching crisis that has spiraled out of control. By the time the international ban was put in place, African elephant populations plummeted from 1.3 million in 1979 to just over 600,000 by the end of the '80s. 
https://www.thedodo.com/community/AdamMRoberts/it-is-our-responsibility-to-save-the-elephants-again-1058751573.html

Since January 2012 alone, more than 103,000 elephants are thought to have been slaughtered by poachers. Today, it's estimated that there are only about 450,000 wild African elephants left.

Warning: Graphic image below

What happened today will hopefully be the beginning of the end of a poaching crisis that, according to WildAid, has been killing 33,000 elephants each year.



"Today's announcement is the greatest single step that could be taken to reduce poaching for elephants. Legal ivory trade has always been used as a cover to launder poached ivory, and when it was authorized by the previous administration in China in 2009, poaching escalated dramatically in Africa," WildAid CEO Peter Knights said in a press release. 
http://www.wildaid.org/

"The Chinese government has supported our ivory demand reduction campaign, led by Yao Ming and Li Bingbing, and has provided support for conservation efforts in Tanzania and other African countries. We thank both Presidents for their personal support for elephant conservation and call upon Hong Kong to join China and the U.S. in consigning the ivory trade to the trash can of history."


Learn what WildAid does for elephants here. 
http://www.wildaid.org/news/us-and-china-agree-ban-ivory-trade
 
And add your name to a pledge to help endangered species here.
http://www.wildaid.org/pledge

    
TOPICS: HISTORIC DECISIONS FOR ANIMALS PRESIDENT OBAMA ELEPHANTS IVORY TRADE ANIMAL WELFARE AFRICAN ELEPHANTS ILLEGAL WILDLIFE TRADE PRESIDENT XI JINPING CHINA ENDANGERED SPECIES ANIMAL VICTORIES

Sunday, September 20, 2015



#WorldRhinoDay ~ September 22, 2015
ASK FOR A COMPLETE BAN ON IVORY AND RHINO HORN SALES, STATE BY STATE, 
IN THE U.S.A.




Email action we can take, to request state by state ban on ivory sales and rhino horn trade.
If you are a U.S.A. resident, please take the time to contact your senators and representatives,
to request that they initiate a ban on ivory sales in your state.

You can find your U.S.A. senator email contacts here:
U.S.A. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
EMAIL ADDRESS CONTACTS
http://www.house.gov/

You can find your U.S.A. House of Representative email contacts here:
U.S.A. SENATE
EMAIL ADDRESS CONTACTS
http://www.house.gov/representatives/find/

If you prefer to make contact via phone, your
U.S.A. senator phone contacts are here:
U.S.A. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
PHONE NUMBER CONTACTS
http://www.house.gov/representatives/

If you prefer to make contact via phone, your
U.S.A. representative phone contacts are here:
U.S.A. SENATE
PHONE NUMBER CONTACTS
http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm

Here is the email we are sending, please feel free to use it, or even better to alter it, and share your thoughts. That's the best way to be heard.


Hello!

I am contacting you regarding the issue of allowing the sale of ivory products and/or rhino horn to continue to be legal in our state.

Certainly, you are aware that the trade in elephant ivory tusks and rhino horns fuels the illegal poaching industry that threatens to drive our African elephants and rhinos to the brink of extinction within a few years.
The African elephant and rhino population simply can not procreate quickly enough to offset the deadly decimation rendered by ivory poachers.

Please read the statistics provided by National Geographic here:
100,000 Elephants Killed by Poachers in Just Three Years, Landmark Analysis Finds
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/08/140818-elephants-africa-poaching-cites-census/

While we do have a federal of ban of ivory in effect, it is being challenged:
United States Tightens the Noose on the Ivory Trade
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/02/140211-united-states-rules-wildlife-trafficking-ivory-science/

The challenge to overturn the U.S.A ban is being spearheaded by the N.R.A.
NRA Campaigns Against The Plan To Save The World’s Elephants
http://thinkprogress.org/world/2014/03/05/3362801/nra-ivory-elephants-guns/

A state by state ban on ivory sales within the U.S.A. would serve to tighten the clamp on ivory poaching by making it illegal to trade ivory.
I am asking that you please initiate and follow through with a bill that would effectively render all ivory sales illegal in our state. New Jersey has already done so, and has included rhino horn in their ban.
New Jersey Passes First Ever U.S. Law To Completely Ban Ivory And Rhino Horn
https://www.thedodo.com/new-jersey-passes-first-ever-u-658977827.html

Thank you very much for taking this dire issue into consideration. I will await your reply.
Sincerely,

Sunday, April 19, 2015


Wildlife crimes and wildlife trafficking 
do not recognize national borders. 




African Wildlife was created to raise awareness about the perils facing our wildlife in Africa, due to poaching, trophy hunting, and habitat loss. 
A short while ago, someone tossed out an accusation toward us, that we had no right to meddle in the affairs of another country. We disagreed, as it appears that many countries are involved in perpetuating the wildlife abuses in Africa. 

Wildlife crime is the fourth largest global illegal trade. http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-32151983 

Five myths about illegal wildlife trafficking http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/five-myths-about-illegal-wildlife-trafficking/2015/04/17/b43182fe-e3a1-11e4-b510-962fcfabc310_story.html 

The reason we are bringing any of this up, is that we are witnessing a trend in online activism, to vilify a country as being the sole aggressor in this war on wildlife. 
Saw this happen with the Taiji dolphin hunts in Japan. Not every Japanese citizen was responsible for this practice, yet frequently we would see vitriolic posts aimed at Japan as a whole. 

How are we to be taken seriously as activists and/or animal rights advocates, if we allow our outrage to turn us into nationalistic voices of hatred? 

The U.S.A. is the second largest global player in the ivory trade that threatens to render Africa’s elephants extinct. Yet again, and again, we are seeing horrific slanderous posts leveled at China and Vietnam. We have some incredible activists working within those countries to raise awareness about poaching elephants for tusks, and rhinos for horns. How can we say we support them, if we are slinging slurs at them for being of Chinese or Vietnamese descent? 

The U.S.A. does have a federal ivory ban in play, but it does not apply state by state. These articles explain in detail what role the U.S.A. plays in ivory trade. 

Citizens Spur States to Ban Trade in Ivory and Rhino Horn From Vermont to California, grassroots efforts drive state actions to protect elephants and rhinos. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2015/04/150407-ivory-trade-vermont-usfws-victor-gordon-cities-nra/rptregcta=reg_free_np&rptregcampaign=2015012_invitation_ro_all 

Pianos and elephants clash at statehouse http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/story/news/politics/2015/04/09/vermont-ivory-ban-bill/25548043/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter 

Complicit In Slaughter: Ivory Bill Has Deadly Loophole 
http://www.courant.com/opinion/op-ed/hc-op-daniels-ct-ivory-trrade-kills-elephants-0412-20150408-story.html 

When it comes to wildlife abuses, the U.S.A. is certainly not guilt free. We have much to answer for how we treat wildlife and wilderness in the United States. http://stopusdawsabuse.blogspot.com/p/predator-defense.html 

EXPOSED - USDA's Secret War on Wildlife https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qSV8pRLkdKI&feature=youtu.be 

Published on Dec 1, 2013 In this award-winning film three former federal agents and a Congressman blow the whistle on Wildlife Services--a barbaric, wasteful and misnamed agency within the USDA--and expose the government's secret war on wildlife on the taxpayer's dime. Wildlife Services has been having their way for almost a century, killing over 100,000 native predators and millions of birds each year, as well as maiming, poisoning, and brutalizing countless pets. They have also seriously harmed more than a few humans. They apparently thought they were going to continue getting away with it. But with your help, we're not going to let them. Learn more and support our efforts to end America's war on wildlife at http://www.predatordefense.org/exposed. Exposed won the award for Best Wildlife Activism at the 2014 New York Wildlife Conservation Film Festival, the premier wildlife film festival in North America. 

You can take action here:

End taxpayer funded abuse, demand shelter reform.
http://petitions.moveon.org/sign/end-taxpayer-funded-abuse.fb50?source=c.fb&r_by=1235249


USDA and GMO. http://blog.seedalliance.org/2014/02/12/whos-responsible-for-gmo-contamination/ 

Ok, hopping off the soapbox now. 
Wildlife crimes and wildlife trafficking are everyone’s business, if they are a citizen of planet Earth. 
We all have a role to play in stopping it. Maybe we can achieve this, without becoming hateful towards all folks who live in a country that has achieved notoriety for wildlife crimes.

~African Wildlife

Wednesday, April 8, 2015



Cling to hope, cast aside despair.



We can do this folks, we can help our Africa to save her irreplaceable wildlife.

We are beyond boundaries now, and we work together due to the threat of global extinction.
When our family in Africa finds themselves fighting off the hideous onslaught of poaching elephants, rhinos, pangolins, and giraffes for the illicit wildlife trade, we know that we face two wounds with them.

First, we loose the brave souls of rangers who work to stop the wildlife poachers who slaughter elephant and rhinos for tusks and horns.
Every four days average, one beautiful human leaves our planet, trying to protect those animals who are hunted dead for ridiculous human need. Rhino horns don’t cure cancer, a hangover, or make for great sex. 

Wildlife crime - the rangers on the front line
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BfWStmtqrNI&feature=youtu.be

Secondly, we suffer an alteration of environment when so many keystone species have been lost.
Aside from moral loss, how will poaching rhinos into extinction affect our environment?
"The Problem of Poaching" https://theproblemofpoaching.wordpress.com/  

We all pay the piper.
No doubt that this is a war against wildlife, but also it is a war against humanity.
Africa loses with economic gains when poachers threaten ecotourism.

Now the poachers turn our applaud of ecotourism and activism concern against us when we share the photographs of our endangered African wildlife and disclose the location, unwittingly, as we wish to promote ecotourism in Africa, as an economic alternative to poaching.
bit.ly/1Cp6R5G  

Then we turn to the convoluted notion of trophy hunting an endangered species as conservation.
I promise not to swear here, as this one throws me off the cliff.
This is my country, and I tried to stop this by authoring a petition for the second black rhino trophy hunt import permit. That died on the vine.
https://secure.avaaz.org/en/petition/USFWS_Deny_trophy_hunt_import_permit_for_Namibian_black_rhino/?dxAkFfb&pv=5
No matter now, the decision was handed down by Director Dan Ashe for USFWS to go right ahead and green light hunts of Namibian Black Rhinos. 
USFWS said it was cool to go ahead and hunt two Grampa Black Rhinos and call it “conservation”.
Kill two members of an endangered species to conserve them? Surreal.
https://www.takepart.com/article/2015/03/26/us-gives-ok-hunter-kill-rhino

Wayne Pacelle, CEO of the @HSUS, thought otherwise, and I can not thank him enough for his eloquent words. I would have said something far more vulgar.

“It is the worst sort of mixed message to give a green light to American trophy hunters to kill rhinos for their heads,” Wayne Pacelle, president of The Humane Society, said in a statement. “When the global community is working so hard to stop people from killing rhinos for their horns, we are giving a stamp of approval to a special class of privileged elite to kill these majestic animals as a head-hunting exercise.”
https://www.takepart.com/article/2015/03/26/us-gives-ok-hunter-kill-rhino

Complicated politics?
You bet, baby.
But worth every moment of concern, every tear of grief.

Our folks in Africa, and our African wildlife Buddies, are counting on us to stop poaching and trophy hunting, so that the next generation of all life will include elephants, all remaining rhino subspecies, big cats, and pangolins.

We can work to Ban Ivory Sales in the USA.
http://wildlifeofafrica.blogspot.com/p/elephants.html

We can work to Ban Ivory Sales in the UK, and contact our Chinese embassies here:
http://www.adinternational.org/conservation/go.php?id=3922&ssi=14

on.fb.me/1IJA7sT
Thank you to Animal Defenders International @AnimalDefenders

We love Africa…… she is Nirvana, and it is our duty to step up, and speak out to protect her.

We stand with you, Africa.
Some of us in the USA are awake and working to make sure you are not alone in the challenge to save your beautiful wildlife from short sighted poachers.

Today, April 8, 2015, held promise.
Souls in New York believe that elephants, black rhinos, white rhinos, lions, and leopards should remain alive in Africa, rather than be dead trophies on a wall. Species on the verge of extinction need our voices, not our silence that will allow their lifeless mounted heads on a trophy hunter’s wall. 

http://friendsofanimals.org/news/2015/april/foa-drafts-bill-protect-five-african-species

https://www.newsday.co.zw/2015/04/08/another-blow-for-zim-wildlife-industry/

Thank you to Friends of Animals @FoAorg ,Michael Harris @WildAnimalLaw, Edita Birnkrant @EditaFoANYC for drafting and promoting this bill. Thank you to @TonyAvella @GeorgeLatimer37 for initiating this bill. Joyce Friedman of @HumaneSociety, bless you for endorsing it.

#AfricanBig5Bill 
The USA stands for life, not trophy hunting our beloved legacy of wildlife that belongs to our family in Africa

Wednesday, December 31, 2014





Happy New Year, 2015
We can end rhino and elephant poaching and canned lion hunts this year!
http://wildlifeofafrica.blogspot.com/2014/12/happy-new-year-we-at-african-wildlife.html



We at African Wildlife believe that with our efforts together, we will see a decline in elephant and rhino poaching, and the canned hunts of lions in Africa.

For starters, please follow these folks, they are doing the hard work and need for us to support them.
We will continue to add to this list, as there are so many dedicated people working to stop poaching and canned trophyhunts of lions. If we missed someone, no offense intended.

Thank you!

@AWF_Official  ~ www.awf.org
@cannedlion ~ www.kalahari-dream.com
@DSWT ~  www.sheldrickwildlifetrust.org
@iworryTrade ~ www.iwory.org
@EleRhinoMarch ~ www.march4elephantsandrhinos.org
@The_GRAA ~ www.gameranger.org
@IAPF ~ www.iapf.org
@IAWF
@paulakahumbu
@SavingSurvivors
@VETPAW ~ www.vetpaw.org
@WCSTanzania ~ www.wcstanzania.org

Saturday, December 27, 2014


This is inconceivable.

Reposted from:

Cops jail rhino rangers



December 27 2014 at 10:14am 
By Simon Bloch. 
Rhino1111
Independent Newspapers.

Durban - KwaZulu-Natal conservation authorities have reacted with fury and disbelief after the SAPS arrested three members of a crack anti-rhino poaching unit (APU) for the alleged murder of a suspected poacher on Christmas Day.

The three men had cancelled their celebrations to protect rhinos at uMkhuze Game Reserve in the iSimangaliso Wetland Park in Zululand, while other staff members were given the opportunity to spend the day with their families.

Acting chief executive of Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife, Dr David Mabunda, told The Independent on Saturday he was “surprised the SAPS decided to charge the field rangers who killed a suspected poacher when their lives were in danger.

“I plan to meet with the national police commissioner, General Rhiya Phiyega, to set up a protocol to handle these matters. Poachers are getting away with murder, while law enforcement agencies are at war with each other. The arrest of the rangers doesn’t make sense. I’m furious.

“We will allow the law to take its course and we will spare no resources on providing legal support to our rangers and also emotional support by referring them to counselling once they are released.”

iSimangaliso chief executive, Andrew Zaloumis, echoed Mabunda’s words and said his organisation would also take the matter up with the SAPS provincial Commissioner Lieutenant-General Mmamonnye Ngobeni.

“Field rangers are at the hard-edge of anti-rhino poaching work and are faced with an increasingly difficult task; more so when seemingly arbitrary arrests of those who have had to actively engage with poachers are made.

“Full support is given by iSimangaliso to Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife field-rangers undertaking anti-rhino poaching work in the Park, who are operating within the law, follow established procedures and are designated environmental law enforcement officials (green scorpions).

“An attorney briefed by iSimangaliso Wetlands Park Authority and Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife, yesterday succeeded in launching an urgent bail application for the arrested staff.”

The application will be heard in the Ubombo Magistrate’s Court this morning.

Colonel Jay Naicker of the SAPS’ KZN media-centre said: “Jozini police attended to the incident at about 2.30pm on Christmas Day.

The three rangers were arrested for murder. Police seized three R1 rifles.

“It is alleged by the rangers at the game reserve that the man was poaching in the reserve, when he was killed by guards while fleeing. It is alleged he was unarmed and had surrendered when he was killed”.

Asked how a dead man would be able to tell detectives he had surrendered before he was shot, he said: “Obviously we will have to wait for the matter to be fully investigated and the docket presented in court.”

According to Ezemvelo’s spokesman, Musa Mntambo, the rangers were arrested before a thorough investigation.

“We opened our own case of poaching with the SAPS only yesterday and we expect justice will prevail this morning.

“On Thursday, field rangers on patrol near Ephaki encountered an armed group of about three suspected poachers who were carrying an axe and a heavy-calibre rifle. The poachers fled, and the rangers pursued them.

“The uMkhuze anti-poaching unit was mobilised, and responded by closing all escape routes. Two APU members walking toward the park came in contact with three suspected poachers, and a shoot-out with the suspected poachers followed.

“During armed contact, one suspected poacher was killed, and the SAPS was notified.”

This year ranks as the darkest for South Africa’s rhino population.

Last year, 1 004 were reported killed.

By the time the poaching books are closed on December 31, the tally could exceed 1 200 for 2014, in the country alone.

Field rangers and anti-poaching units were on high-alert on Thursday, following the discovery of a poached black rhino cow and her calf at the Zululand Rhino reserve on Christmas Eve.

The young calf is believed to have died of natural causes. - The Independent on Saturday