At least 55 elephants have starved to death in the past
two months in Zimbabwe’s biggest national park as a serious drought forces
animals to stray into nearby communities in search of food and water,
authorities said on Monday.
“The problem is real, the situation is dire,” said
National Parks and Wildlife Management Authority spokesman Tinashe Farawo.
Other animals such as lions at Hwange National Park have been affected.
This is the worst drought in years in the southern
African nation that also suffers from a collapsing economy. Massive food and
water shortages have resulted.
We have managed to significantly reduce poaching ... we
were losing hundreds of elephants in past years, but last year we only lost not
more than 20 to poaching.
As animals stray from Zimbabwe’s wildlife parks they
destroy crops and sometimes kill people, Farawo said, adding that more than 20
people have been killed this year alone.
Overcrowding in Hwange contributes to the destruction of
vegetation. The park can handle 15,000 elephants but currently has about
53,000, Farawo said.
Meanwhile the drought is drying up water sources. The
wildlife agency has been drilling wells as deep as 400 meters (yards) to find
water for the animals.
“The single biggest threat to our animals now is loss of
habitat,” Farawo said. “We have managed to significantly reduce poaching … we
were losing hundreds of elephants in past years, but last year we only lost not
more than 20 to poaching.”
Zimbabwe has one of Africa’s largest elephant
populations. It seeks to be allowed to hunt and export more of them to ease
pressure on the animals’ habitat and raise badly needed money for conservation.
Botswana, which also has a large elephant population,
this year lifted a ban on elephant hunting, saying the move would help reduce
conflict between humans and animals and earn the country much-needed revenue.
But other countries that are parties to the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora have
successfully lobbied to limit the sales of elephants, to the dismay of some
African countries that say they are struggling with large numbers of the
animals.
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