Killing for Profit: Exposing the Illegal Rhino Horn Trade

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Killing for Profit: Exposing the Illegal Rhino Horn Trade Page 40

by Rademeyer, Julian


  and Operation Lock 88, 89, 90–95

  World Wildlife Trust 83

  Wu, Jianwei 199, 200

  Xaysavang Export-Import Company 185, 288, 299

  and CITES 288, 289, 294, 297

  and rhino killing 108, 125

  and trading in rhino horn 154, 164, 167, 179–180, 188, 288, 296–297

  and trading in wild animals 289, 293, 295, 296–298

  Yemen 112, 271

  Yengeni, Tony 201–202

  Yu, Zhongda 199

  Zachariah 229–230

  Zambezi Valley 19–21

  Zambia 19, 20, 59, 76, 110

  zebra gangs 5–6, 8

  zebra poaching 8

  Zimbabwe xi, 10, 13, 19, 131

  and Dawie Groenewald 130–132

  land resettlement programme 2–3, 130

  and Operation Lock 76–77

  refugees 233–235

  rhino population 2, 19, 111

  Rhodesian Bush War 19, 20, 27

  wildlife conservancies 2–3

  Zimbabwean Association of Tourism and Safari Operators 131

  Zimbabwe National Parks (Zimparks) 4, 19, 131

  Zimbabwe Professional Hunters and Guides Association 131–132

  Zitha, Albert 213

  Zitha, Batista 211, 213–214, 228

  Zitha, Dario 211–215, 228

  Zoutpansberger 12, 13

  Zulu Dawn film 138

  Zuma, Jacob 144, 202, 203, 204, 206, 207–208

  A wounded poacher, Hardlife Nkomo, is questioned by game scouts. A hundred metres away lies a bloodied .303 rifle fitted with a silencer

  Blondie Leathem and Magotshe Siziba – his former Zimparks sergeant – discuss a possible incursion by poachers into the Bubye Valley Conservancy. The two men have been at the forefront of Zimbabwe’s ‘rhino wars’ for the past twenty-five years

  A .375 hunting rifle, fitted with a custom-made silencer, which was stolen during a violent farm attack near Musina in South Africa, and later used to poach rhinos in Zimbabwe

  Another silenced rifle was found by Zimbabwean police in a hidden compartment in the tailgate of a South African–registered bakkie

  Zimbabwean poacher Rodgers ‘Teacher’ Mukwena

  Two game scouts, Godknows Zulu (left) and Sylvester Ncube (right) tracking poachers in the Bubye Valley Conservancy

  Musina poacher Johan Roos photographed after his 2009 arrest in Zimbabwe

  The Lemmer family, from left to right: Faan Snr, Faan Jnr and Christi in their Musina home in 2010. A .375 rifle, stolen during a robbery on their farm, was found in Zimbabwe, where it was used to poach rhinos

  An orphaned rhino calf, one of several rehabilitated by Blondie Leathem and his wife Katrina, suckles on a milk bottle in a protected boma

  Alleged rhino-horn-syndicate ‘mastermind’ Dawie Groenewald on his farm near Musina

  A Vietnamese ‘hunter’ poses with her kill

  The many faces of a wildlife trafficker. Chumlong Lemtongthai, aka ‘Chai’, poses for his webcam at his home in Thailand

  Chumlong Lemtongthai (left) is ordained as a Buddhist monk, a nominal ordination that many Thai men undergo during their lives

  Chumlong with the Hummer he paid for in cash

  Chumlong (centre) and Punpitak Chunchom pose with labourers on a lion-breeding farm near the Cradle of Humankind World Heritage Site in Gauteng

  Farm labourers with the skinned carcass of a lioness

  Lion carcasses are stripped of flesh and the bones are cleaned

  Chumlong Lemtongthai poses with a number of lionesses on another farm. It is unclear whether the animals are dead or sedated

  One of the Thai men working with Chumlong Lemtongthai poses with a complete ‘set’ of lion bones

  Members of the Xaysavang syndicate photographed in Bangkok with an illegal consignment of ivory

  Punpitak Chunchom and hunting outfitter Juan Pace with a pile of money that is believed to have been payment for the first rhinos that the Xaysavang syndicate shot

  Chumlong Lemtongthai

  Marnus Steyl

  Punpitak Chunchom

  According to Johnny Olivier, Chumlong Lemtongthai described his business with these words: ‘We shoot, we cut, we weigh, then pay.’ Chumlong watches farm workers with knives removing a dead rhino’s horns

  Punpitak Chunchom weighs a set of horns

  A pile of cash drawn from ATMs at Emperors Palace Casino

  A young Thai woman – one of the many allegedly recruited by the Xaysavang syndicate – poses with a rhino carcass

  Game farmer Marnus Steyl poses with one of the Thai ‘recruits’. When I later tracked her down (INSET), the woman – who only wanted to be identified as ‘Wi’ – denied shooting any rhinos

  Chumlong Lemtongthai and a North West environmental services department official

  Three of the young women allegedly recruited to pose as ‘hunters’ by the Xaysavang syndicate

  A photograph discovered on a camera belonging to ex-cop and alleged rhino horn smuggler ‘Big Joe’ Nyalunga. It was submitted to court during his bail hearing and appears to show an unidentified man in handcuffs being tortured. In the background is a car battery, jumper cables and cans of beer

  Albert Zitha holds a photo of his dead brother Dario, who was shot dead in the Kruger National Park while trying to poach rhinos

  Thando, the Musina con man, making one of his fake rhino horns

  Left: Tommy Tuan’s passport; below left: R1.2 million in cash spread out on the bed of his hotel room; below right: the embassy car he was driving when he was arrested in Kimberley

  A Vietnamese man consumes rhino horn from a grinding dish in which it was ground and mixed with water

  A rare photograph of Xaysavang boss Vixay Keosavang (left) and Chumlong Lemtongthai (right). Apparently taken in Thailand, it was obtained from a source with close links to Thai investigators

  Company registration documents for Xaysavang Trading bearing a photograph of Vixay

  Vixay’s business card

  Vixay’s home and offices in Paksan in central Laos

  Chumlong Lemtongthai in the dock of the Kempton Park Regional Court in South Africa. Investigator Paul O’Sullivan is standing in the background to the right

  From left to right: Chumlong Lemtongthai, Punpitak Chunchom and Marnus Steyl in the Kempton Park Regional Court

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