Rangers from Tanzania’s Wildlife Division and the Kenya
Wildlife Service (KWS) on Friday graduated alongside their four-legged
partners—eight ivory detection dogs—following two months of intensive
training under African Wildlife Foundation’s (AWF’s) Conservation Canine
Programme. The programme specifically combats the “trafficking”
component of the illegal wildlife trade by installing ivory detection
dogs at seaports, airports and other ivory trafficking chokepoints, and
aims to establish a “canine centre of excellence” on the continent. A
ceremony to honour the graduates and a mock demonstration of the dogs at
work was held near Arusha, and was attended by representatives from
Wildlife Division, KWS, Tanzania National Parks and Ngorongoro
Conservation Area Authority, among others.
Under a Memorandum of
Understanding (MOU) signed between AWF and Wildlife Division, a dog
detection team will first be installed at the Port of Dar es Salaam,
where it will search shipping containers for smuggled ivory moving
through the busy East African port.
“Wildlife Division appreciates
the efforts done by African Wildlife Foundation and other stakeholders
in the initiation of a conservation canine programme,” said Wildlife
Division Head of Anti-Poaching Faustin Masalu, who delivered remarks
during Friday’s graduation ceremony. “The use of sniffer dogs is indeed a
big score for law enforcers and a defeat for illegal traffickers. We
hope that the experience of using sniffer dogs at Julius Nyerere
International Airport, Kilimanjaro International Airport and Dar es
Salaam Seaport will generate a good approach, and the same technique can
be applied at other checkpoints like Songwe airport and Tanga seaport.”
Masalu noted that his department would do everything to ensure the AWF canine programme is successful and sustainable.
“The use of sniffer dogs will
help to crack down on the poaching of elephants and other wildlife
species, and illegal traffickers will not be safe at any point,
particularly at checkpoints,” he said.
A similar MOU was signed
between AWF and KWS to install dog detection teams at the Port of
Mombasa, as well as other identified export hubs—Jomo Kenyatta
International Airport and the border crossings of Lunga Lunga and
Namanga, for example—through which ivory is trafficked.
“We are most grateful to
African Wildlife Foundation for supporting this important initiative,”
Kenya Wildlife Service Director General William Kiprono said in a
statement. “The rigorous training by eminent instructors will help to
strengthen and supplement our existing canine unit, which was one of the
first in the region designed to disrupt the illegal wildlife supply
chain through our airports and seaports, among other places. This
training will help to modernize the KWS force and improve the
effectiveness of patrols by use of canines for conservation.”
KWS Deputy Director of Security
Robert Muasya attended Friday’s event and said the anti-trafficking
effort would go a long way toward bringing to book ivory smugglers.
“The skills acquired by both
the rangers and the canines that have completed the training programme
are of immeasurable importance to both Kenya and Tanzania, and we look
forward to utilizing those excellent and rare skills,” Muasya said.
The Ports of Dar es Salaam and
Mombasa have long been identified as primary export hubs for trafficked
ivory out of Africa. Between 2006 and 2014, more than 85 per cent of
seized savannah elephant ivory was traced back to East Africa, much of
it from southeastern Tanzania. Between 2009 and 2015, an estimated
188,170 kg of ivory was reportedly smuggled through Kenya’s Port of
Mombasa.
AWF’s CEO, Dr Patrick Bergin, praised Wildlife Division and KWS for
their commitment to reverse these trends and be part of the solution in
tackling wildlife trafficking.
“Man’s best friend can be
wildlife’s best friend too,” said Bergin, who participated in Friday’s
ceremony. “A well-trained dog and a skilled handler are one of the best
ways to detect and deter the smuggling of wildlife products across
international borders. Unlike some of the newer technological solutions
that have been proposed, detection dogs are a tried and proven
technology. If we can make it more difficult and more risky for
traffickers to get their products to market, then we make this business
less attractive to those looking for a quick, easy profit.”
In the design and launch of the
programme, AWF Conservation Canine Director Will Powell emphasized the
need to think beyond simply training dogs and handing them over.
“Too often the focus is only on
training the dog, with little thought about the person working with
that dog on a daily basis or the environment needed to care for our
canine partners,” said Powell, who for many years trained dogs to detect
landmines and explosives before turning his attention to the
conservation theatre.
“The relationship between the
dog and his or her handler is one of the most important factors in the
success of any programme like this,” he said. “If the dog and handler
don’t trust, respect and love one another, the partnership breaks down.
Happy dogs are motivated dogs, and we have to ensure the handlers not
only know how to make their dog happy but also why it is important.”
In Africa, dogs are already
being used to help track poachers in the bush. AWF’s partner, Honeyguide
Foundation, uses tracker dogs to combat poaching on an AWF-managed
conservancy between Tanzania’s Lake Manyara and Tarangire National
Parks, and a number of Wildlife Management Areas (WMA), including
Burunge WMA, Enduimet WMA and Randilen WMA.
Dr Philip Muruthi, AWF’s Vice
President of Species Protection, explained AWF’s vision to establish a
“canine centre of excellence” on the African continent: “We see this
serving as a model for anyone or any group wanting to deploy detection
dogs in Africa. We have started with Kenya and Tanzania because wildlife
trafficking remains a big problem in these two countries and because we
have a longstanding partnership with KWS and Wildlife Division. We have
identified other areas of weakness in the ivory trafficking chain and
will soon look to deploy dogs to these sites.”
Muruthi noted the detection
dogs are part of AWF’s overall strategy to stop the killing, stop the
trafficking and stop the demand. He said AWF was already looking into
training a new class of handlers and dogs for countries such as
Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Mozambique and that soon
the dogs would be trained to sniff out rhino horn.
During Friday’s event, four dogs and six handlers from Tanzania
graduated alongside four dogs, six handlers and one corporal from Kenya.
The dogs selected for ivory detection were brought in from Europe
earlier this year, and comprise a mix of breeds, including spaniel,
German shepherd, Malinois and a German short-haired pointer.
Officials and key partners who
attended Friday’s graduation ceremony include: Wildlife Division Head of
Anti-poaching Faustin Masalu; Wildlife Division Head of Intelligence
John Ngowi; Tanzania National Parks Director General Allan J.H. Kijazi;
KWS Deputy Director of Security Robert Muasya; KWS Human Capital Manager
Elizabeth Njeri; KWS Canine Master Mark Kinyua; Ngorongoro Conservation
Area Authority Conservator Freddy Manongi; Honeyguide Foundation
Chairman Ole Kirimbai; Mweka College of African Wildlife Management
Rector Alex Songorwa; and members of Tanzania’s tourism community.
No comments:
Post a Comment