ARUSHA, Tanzania, May 23 a senior wildlife conservator with
Tanzania National Parks (Tanapa) has been arrested with one piece of elephant
tusk in northern region of Arusha, authorities said on Monday.
Tanapa's spokesperson, Pascal Shelutete said in a statement that the
experienced wildlife conservator, Genes Shayo, 60, was arrested by Tanapa's
anti-poaching special task force on May 16, this year, in Arumeru District. Shelutete
said that the country's wildlife watchdog received information that a person
identified as Emmanuel Nassari, a resident of Ngarenanyuki in Arumeru District,
owned ivory for which he was searching customers.
Nassari is a pastor at one of the Arusha-based churches under the Tanzania
Assemblies of God (TAG).
It stated that after receiving the information, Tanapa consulted the
national anti-poaching special task force for investigation. According to
Shelutete, the task force succeeded to arrest pastor Nassari on May 15, this
year, and after interrogations he admitted to have the ivory at his home.
He told the police that he was able to acquire the ivory through
collaboration with Tanapa senior conservator, Genes Shayo. Nassari insisted
that Shayo was aware of the ivory, a situation that forced police to arrest the
conservator on May 16, this year, for interrogation.
The Tanzania National Parks has appealed to the public to continue
cooperating with the authority by providing it with information on poaching. Shelutete
said that Tanapa would continue to take actions against anyone, including its
staff, who would be found to be engaged in poaching activities.
The arrest of the conservator came at the time when the country's wildlife
watchdog is transforming itself into paramilitary to scale up anti-poaching
battle. Tanapa is in charge of taking care of Tanzania's national parks. Tanzania
has emerged as the epicenter of Africa's elephant poaching crisis after a
government census revealed it had lost a "catastrophic" 60 percent of
its elephants in just five years.
The results pile pressure on Tanzania's government that has been heavily
criticized for its inability to stop a flood of poached ivory being stripped
from its national parks.
Tanzania's elephant population is one of the continent’s largest. But data
released last year by the Tanzania showed that between 2009 and 2014 the number
dropped from 109,051 to 43,330. When an annual birth rate of 5 percent is taken
into account the number of dead is 85,181.
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