NewsZimbabwe's plan to cull 200 elephants sparks global outrage

Zimbabwe's plan to cull 200 elephants sparks global outrage

In the Hwange nature reserve, about 100,000 elephants live.
In the Hwange nature reserve, about 100,000 elephants live.
Images source: © Adobe Stock

16 September 2024 06:03

The authorities of Zimbabwe have announced a controversial plan. Hunters are to shoot 200 elephants. They want to send the meat to people. For animal rights defenders, this idea is absurd.

Sithembiso Nyoni, the Minister of Environment, Climate, and Wildlife in Zimbabwe, announced the shooting of 200 elephants. The government explained that the meat of the animals would be dried and sent to communities affected by a lack of access to protein.

They want to kill the elephants

- There are more elephants in Zimbabwe than our forests can hold - admitted Sithembiso Nyoni. The minister also added that Zimbabwe intends to replicate Namibia's initiative, which has already started hunting over 700 wild animals in the fight against hunger, including hippos, buffaloes, zebras, blue wildebeests, antelopes, and elephants. Eighty-three of the latter are planned to be killed.

Hunting elephants in Zimbabwe is to take place in selected, predetermined regions. These are places where large animals come into conflict with people. This also applies to Hwange, the largest nature reserve in the country, home to 100,000 elephants. Larger populations of these animals are only found in neighbouring Botswana.

The World Food Programme reports that Zimbabwe and four other countries in southern Africa—Zambia, Namibia, Botswana, and Mali—have been severely affected by drought caused by the El Niño phenomenon. This drought has destroyed most of this year's corn and wheat crops, forcing millions of people to face the problem of hunger.

There is no agreement

Not everyone agrees with the plans of Zimbabwe and Namibia. They have met with strong criticism from animal rights defenders. Critics accuse Zimbabwe of not having the primary goal of helping drought victims but of obtaining ivory, which is very expensive.

See also