UWA, Police nab elephant poacher in Fort Portal

By Amon Katungulu | Tuesday, July 2, 2019
UWA, Police nab elephant poacher in Fort Portal

By Bridget Kabahenda 

Police and the Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA) in Fort Portal have arrested a man suspected of killing an elephant in Semuliki National Park in Ntoroko district for its tusks.

Keep Reading

The suspect has been identified as Wendi Muhereza (32) a resident of Kabangali cell in Kyenjojo district.

Muhereza was found with two tusks of ivory weighing 40kg which he allegedly attained after killing an elephant in Semuliki National Park in Ntoroko district.

Topics You Might Like

News elephants UWA uganda wildlife authority poaching poaching Uganda elephants poaching UWA Police nab elephant poacher in Fort Portal

Three other suspects in connection to the act are still at large.

The Rwenzori West community liaison officer Mugisa Solomon confirmed the arrest. He said Muhereza will be charged with illegal possession of wildlife species, a charge equivalent to 3 years imprisonment.

Poaching and Illegal wildlife trade in areas neighboring national parks have become a matter of concern threatening tourism sector despite UWA's efforts to curb the vice.

Conservation bodies estimate that Uganda hosts around 5,000 elephants in Uganda today. They are mostly found in the landscapes of Kidepo, Murchison-Semliki, and the Greater Virunga Landscape. With a very low reproduction rate (one calf per female every 8.6 years), elephant populations recover more slowly than many other animals, with a maximum annual population growth of about 6%.

African elephants face several global and country-specific threats. At the global level, killing of elephants for their ivory is by far the most pronounced threat. Illegal poaching and wildlife trafficking is the fourth largest transnational crime in the world.  Ivory – sometimes called “the white gold of jihad” – helps fund the military operations of notorious terrorist groups.  Smuggling gangs move tons of tusks to markets thousands of miles away. In 2012 alone,35,000 elephants were butchered for their tusks in Africa: that is 96 elephants each day. Because of weak law enforcement,Uganda is a major transit route of illegal ivory from other African countries.

 

What’s your take on this story?

Get the word out — share with your network

Get Ahead of the News.
Stay in the know with real-time breaking news alerts, exclusive reports, and updates that matter to you.

Tap ‘Yes, Keep Me Updated’ and never miss what’s happening in Uganda and beyond—first and fast from NilePost.