Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Botswana defends elephant hunts

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BOTSWANA’S decision to reintroduc­e elephant hunting was necessary to protect its people and environmen­t, and hasn’t adversely affected the $2bn tourism industry, according to Investment, Trade and Industry Minister Joy Kenewendo.

Botswana has the world’s biggest elephant population, with about 130 000 of the animals. Increasing incidents of elephants destroying crops and trampling villagers to death were cited by President Mokgweetsi Masisi as ther reason he lifted a hunting ban on wildlife in May.

e decision, condemned by conservati­on groups, has become a key political issue as Masisi seeks to win re-election next week. The move to keep the elephant population under control could help shore up his support in rural communitie­s but it also widened a rift with his predecesso­r, Ian Khama, who has since formed a rival party.

The government’s main motivation was to address a human-wildlife conflict that had reached “epidemic proportion­s,” Kenewendo said in a phone interview from Gaborone, the capital.

“What is important to us is to protect the environmen­t, it’s to protect our people and ensure that there is a balance in the ecosystem,” she said. “When we talk to people on a personal level and when they come here, they get to really understand what we are talking about. As a result we haven’t really seen a big change in our tourism.”

As many as 50 Batswana, the term for people from the country, were killed by elephants since 2014 and hundreds of reports of property damage have been filed.

Tourism, mainly in the form of photograph­ic safaris around the southern African nation’s Okavango and Chobe regions, accounts for a fifth of Botswana’s economy. The government intends allowing 158 elephants to be killed in trophy hunts over the next year. — AFP

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