Crypto Investing Capital
  • Investing
  • Stocks
  • World News
  • Economy
  • Investing
  • Stocks
  • World News
  • Economy

Crypto Investing Capital

World News

70 rhinos reared at controversial captive breeding farm set free in Rwanda

by admin June 20, 2025
June 20, 2025
70 rhinos reared at controversial captive breeding farm set free in Rwanda

Transporting the world’s second largest land mammal halfway across the second largest continent isn’t exactly easy.

But in a 3,400-kilometer (2,100-mile) journey that involved crates, cranes, trucks, and a Boeing 747, 70 captive bred southern white rhinos were moved from South Africa to Rwanda’s Akagera National Park in early June as part of an initiative to “rewild” them.

The creatures, which can weigh over 2,000 kilograms (more than 4,000 pounds), originated from a controversial breeding program started in the 1990s by property developer John Hume.

Hume, who spent years lobbying for the legalization of the rhino horn trade, amassed stockpiles of horn, obtained by trimming them without harming the animals, with the aim of flooding the market to driver poachers out of business and to fund conservation efforts.

African Parks moved 70 rhinos 3,400 kilometers from South Africa to Rwanda as part of a rewilding initiative.
African Parks

But he ran out of money, and with the horn trade still banned under international law, he put the rhinos up for sale in 2023. He told Agence France-Presse (AFP) at the time that he’d spent around $150 million on the project – with surveillance being the largest cost. “I’m left with nothing except 2,000 rhinos and 8,000 hectares (20,000 acres) of land.”

He didn’t receive a single bid. African Parks — a conservation nonprofit that manages 23 protected areas across the continent — stepped in to acquire for an undisclosed sum what was the largest rhino captive breeding operation in the world, with plans to “rewild” the animals over 10 years.

The translocation marked the first cross-continental move for African Parks’ Rhino Rewild initiative.

“It’s a very important milestone,” says Taylor Tench, a senior wildlife policy analyst at the nonprofit Environmental Investigation Agency US, who wasn’t involved in the relocation. “This is definitely a big development with respect to African Parks’ efforts.”

‘A story of hope’

Today, there remain only about 17,000 southern white rhinos in Africa and they’re classified as “near threatened” on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List. That means the 2,000 southern white rhinos that African Parks bought, and plans to spread around the continent, comprise more than 10% of the remaining population.

Although the international trade of rhino horn has been banned under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) since 1977, demand from consumers in Asia who see it as a status symbol, or falsely believe it can cure ailments ranging from hangovers to cancer, is still driving poaching.

Poachers sometimes kill a rhino outright, or tranquilize it before cutting off its horn, sometimes hacking off a large portion of the animal’s face, leaving it bleeding to death.

In South Africa, where the majority of the population lives, 420 rhinos were poached in 2024. More than 100 were killed in the first three months of this year.

Tench says that rhino poaching was rampant in the continent from 2012 to 2015, and a “lot has been accomplished since then.” He added that Kenya lost no rhinos last year and that poaching has dropped significantly in Zimbabwe. Today, poaching is mostly concentrated in South Africa and Namibia, he says.

To better address the issue, Tench says more government resources should be dedicated to addressing the organized criminal networks behind the poaching and international trading of rhino horn, and to increased international cooperation.

Rickelton says there are a number of future relocation projects in various stages of discussion and planning. He adds that a strong framework is in place to ensure the locations that receive the rhinos provide a suitable habitat, security to keep the animals safe, and enough funding to care for them.

The move to Akagera National Park took more than a year and a half of planning and approvals. And the cost of moving each rhino, including three years of monitoring and management afterwards, is about $50,000 (the move was backed by the Howard G. Buffet Foundation).

The animals were first moved from the breeding program facility to the South African private game reserve Munywana Conservancy, to expose them to conditions more like Akagera. Then, the rhinos were loaded into individual steel crates, driven to an airport in Durban, South Africa, and carefully loaded by crane onto a Boeing 747.

After arrival in Kigali, Rwanda, the rhinos made the final leg of their journey by road. Now, the rhinos need to adapt to their new environment. They’ll be monitored by a veterinary team for several weeks.

Measures like a canine unit to reduce poaching are in place in Akagera, which has reduced poaching to “near zero” levels, according to the park.

There’s reason for optimism. In 2021, African Parks moved 30 rhinos to Akagera from a private game reserve in South Africa. Since, they’ve had 11 offspring. With the addition of 70 more rhinos, “we’ve now established a genetically viable herd of rhino,” says Rickelton.

He says that seeing the rhinos emerge from their crates at the end of the journey “makes months and months of really hard work and frustration and challenges really worth it.” Rickelton adds: “It’s a story of hope in a world of not too much positive.”

This post appeared first on cnn.com

previous post
Britain’s lawmakers vote to allow assisted dying, after fraught national debate
next post
‘It feels like a missile is following me’: Iranians say daily life filled with fear and distrust

Related Posts

Germany deploys permanent troops to another country for...

May 23, 2025

Severe heat waves hit southern Europe as local...

June 30, 2025

Pope prays for Chinese Catholics, hinting at how...

May 26, 2025

Israeli military says it has launched first stages...

May 17, 2025

US revokes visas of British rap punk duo...

July 1, 2025

Three children and two adults killed in suicide...

May 21, 2025

More than a third of this country’s population...

June 27, 2025

75 years after he was kidnapped to North...

June 28, 2025

US urges restraint as Kashmir massacre tensions put...

May 2, 2025

Britain’s lawmakers vote to allow assisted dying, after...

June 20, 2025

    Join our mailing list to get access to special deals, promotions, and insider information. Your exclusive benefits await! Enjoy personalized recommendations, first dibs on sales, and members-only content that makes you feel like a true VIP. Sign up now and start saving!


    By opting in you agree to receive emails from us and our affiliates. Your information is secure and your privacy is protected.

    Recent Posts

    • First Quantum Secures US$1 Billion in Gold Stream Deal with Royal Gold

      August 7, 2025
    • Uranium Energy’s Sweetwater Project Fast-Tracked Under Trump Initiative

      August 7, 2025
    • Productivity Commission Says Trump’s Tariffs Will “Redirect” Others to Australia

      August 7, 2025
    • Crypto Market Update: Bitcoin ETFs Shed US$1.46 Billion Amid Stagflation Jitters

      August 7, 2025
    • NextSource Pens Graphite Deal with Mitsubishi​ as US Tightens Grip on Sector

      August 7, 2025
    • Westport

      August 7, 2025

    Popular

    • 1

      Sentiment Signals Suggest Skepticism

      April 28, 2025
    • 2

      Starbucks imposes new limits on what baristas can wear under their green aprons

      April 28, 2025
    • 3

      Trial of gang accused of robbing Kim Kardashian at gunpoint opens in Paris

      April 28, 2025
    • 4

      Gangs attack another town in Haiti’s central region, killing an 11-year-old child and three others

      April 29, 2025
    • 5

      Convicted Italian cardinal pulls out of conclave to choose new pope

      April 29, 2025
    • 6

      Body of Ukrainian journalist who died in Russian detention returned by Moscow with signs of torture and with missing organs

      April 30, 2025
    • 7

      ‘Mushroom murder’ trial begins for woman accused of killing lunch guests in Australia

      April 29, 2025
    • About us
    • Contacts
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Email Whitelisting

    Copyright © 2025 cryptoinvestingcapital.com | All Rights Reserved