Poachers kill rare one-horned rhino in Nepal

The animal was found in Chitwan National Park with its horn gouged out.


Afp April 09, 2017
The one-horned rhino is incredily rare. Some 600 of Nepal's 645 rhinos live in Chitwan National Park. PHOTO: WWF

KATHMANDU: Poachers have shot dead a one-horned rhinoceros at a national wildlife park in Nepal, officials said Sunday, highlighting once again the threat these rare animals face.
Officials found the male rhino with its horn gouged out in Chitwan National Park, the country's largest rhino conservation area, on Saturday.
"We performed a post-mortem and found that it had been hit by a bullet on its head," the park's spokesman Nurendra Aryal said. He added a team had been set up to investigate the incident and security had been tightened at the district borders.
In September 2016 a rhino died weeks after poachers shot it in the same park, the first of the rare animals to be killed in the country in more than two years.

Onlookers cheer abuse of captive rhino at Lal Suharna National Park
Thousands of one-horned rhinos once roamed the plains of Nepal, but their numbers have plunged over the past century due to poaching and human encroachment on their habitat.
The population decline was particularly dramatic during Nepal's 1996-2006 civil war, when soldiers on anti-poaching duties were redeployed to fight the Maoist guerrilla insurgency.
But the country has since made rapid progress in combating the poachers who kill the animals for their prized horns, drawing praise from conservation groups and activists.
The horns fetch huge prices in some Asian countries where they are used for medicines and jewellery.

Nepal to relocate five rare one-horned rhinos
Nepal is home to about 645 rhinos, of which about 600 live in Chitwan National Park.
The park is in the process of relocating five rhinos to another conservation area in far-west Nepal to boost their population.
Shant Raj Jnawali, a rhino expert at WWF, said the latest death highlighted the vulnerability of the animals despite anti-poaching efforts from the community, park wardens and army.
"We hope that the investigation will help us devise new strategies to strengthen protection for these animals," Jnawali said.
Rhino poaching carries a maximum penalty of 15 years in jail and a 100,000-rupee ($1,000) fine.

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