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Hunting >> Hunting in Africa & hunting dangerous game

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NitroXAdministrator
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The Hunger for Nyama
      #18418 - 25/08/04 12:01 AM

Kill Rogue Elephants

The Nation (Nairobi)
August 23, 2004
Cyrus Kinyungu
Nairobi

Three stray elephants were yesterday shot dead by Kenya Wildlife Service rangers after they terrorised Limuru residents for more than nine hours.

The beasts, each weighing an estimated six tons and aged over 10 years, were part of a herd that had strayed out of the Aberdares' Kereita forest and into Bibirioni sublocation of Kiambu District.

Residents of Kinyogoori, Ngarariga and Gitogothi villages were woken up at 5am yesterday by the beasts, which invaded their farms, destroying crops and fences and other homestead structures.

They rubbed themselves against houses, leaving the villagers terrified.

A subchief, Mr Michael Kang'ethe, said the residents started screaming as early as 5am as the animals broke through fences, sending their domestic colleagues scampering for safety.

"Our cattle broke out of their sheds and ran into the darkness as they escaped from the jumbos, while the dogs almost got into our houses as they sought protection," a villager said.

Yesterday, the area was alive with activity as the residents skipped church services to try to drive the animals away.

The older villagers played hide and seek with the beasts as excited children moved closer to get a glimpse of the huge animals, which they had most probably seen only in pictures.

As the crowd drove the animals out of one farm they met another herd approaching. And on turning back, the pursuers were forced to scamper as the animals went for them, trumpeting and kicking up dust in anger.

At one point, residents said, a youth was trampled and injured in the stampede as one elephant followed close by. Luckily, the animal's attention was diverted elsewhere and it changed its course.

At Kinyogoori, a colonial reserve with hundreds of crowded houses, one full-grown bull estimated to weigh more than 6 tons vented its wrath on farms as it destroyed maize crops and green vegetables on small plots.

With people surrounding it, the agitated beast decided to destroy structures in some homesteads. It trampled down fences, bathrooms, kitchens, gates and granaries.

Attempts by KWS rangers to dissuade the villagers from following the animal was unheeded even as the invaders turned brutal.

Minutes before the rangers, accompanied by administration police, decided to shoot some, one had demolished a pit latrine and slipped into it with the hind legs.

It struggled to pull itself out for over five minutes as hundreds of people gathered around, defying the rangers' warning that they keep off.

When it finally got out, hundreds of villagers scampered for safety with the jumbo in hot pursuit.

They were saved by the rangers and the APs who shot it dead.

And after the rangers removed tusks from the fallen jumbos, it was all joy as the villagers closed in with pangas and axes to get a share of the meat.

The villagers almost fought as they disagreed on how much meat each should carry home.

Even before the beasts were felled, women carried baskets as their male colleagues toted polythene bags and machete in readiness for the windfall.

Mr John Githinji of Kinyogori said the area lies on the elephants' migratory route.

Ngong forest warden Mary Karabui, who led the operation, said the animals could not be driven back into the forest as it was dangerous to do so. Owing to the dense population in the villages, it would be disastrous trying to drive them back to Kereita forest, more than 10km away.

"We believe the elephants came from Kereita forest, which is part of the Aberdares. We suspect they passed between Gatamaiyu and Kinare parts of the forest," she said.

She explained that KWS was putting up an electric fence in the section of the Aberdares as a permanent solution to the problem.

"Plans to put up a live-wire fence at Gatamaiyu and Kinale parts of the Aberdare forest are at an advanced stage," she added.

At the time of going to press, two elephants were still roaming the area. The KWS officials were still considering driving them back to the forest.

One was at Gitogothi, a stone's throw away from novelist Ngugi wa Thiong'os home, while the other was near Kinyogoori High School.



--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: The Hunger for Nyama [Re: NitroX]
      #18419 - 25/08/04 12:02 AM

Jumbos Killing Elicit Sharp Rebuke From Wardens

The East African Standard (Nairobi)
August 24, 2004
Nixon Ng'ang'a
Nairobi

Like with the rest of the country, Limuru residents may be under the grip of biting hunger and starvation but that hardly mitigates their savagery and plain greed subjected to three rogue elephants last Sunday.

The human hounds decided not to wait for the carcass. By the time the elephants breathed their last, little of their bodies had any flesh on them.

Besides the villagers' act, the treatment of the elephants that had strayed from the Aberdares is being blamed on police officers who killed them.

"They did not have the right guns for the job. What they used were a low calibre automatic guns lacking the requisite firepower to kill elephants with minimum pain," says a senior warden with the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS).

Rapacious villagers had cruelly parceled out chunks of meat into polythene bags from whatever quarter their knives and pangas could cut from creatures still resisting death from a hail of police bullets.

A man shouldered away the giant tail he had hacked off from a still-breathing elephant; a middle-aged woman, resolutely unmoved by the painful whimpers and pitiable movements of an elephant's eyes, filled her bag with a bloody steak. It was a macabre feast that would send the average animal rights crusader into prolonged mourning.

There is no gainsaying the dangers and the damage rogue elephants can visit on a community. This notwithstanding, there must surely be a civilised, humane and dignified way of dealing with their menace unlike what villagers of Kinyogoori, Ngarariga and Gitogothi did.

According to the KWS officer, the Wildlife Management Act clearly stipulates the range of guns for hunting/killing wildlife.

He says: "Cap 376 is explicit. You can only use long rifles and other heavy calibre guns such as .303, .306 and .458. The intention is to have a powerful gun that can kill with a single shot. You don't use G-3 and other automatic guns."

He blames Sunday's scenes where officers kept pumping bullets into elephants that apparently "refused" to die on "weak" bullets adding it was disagreeably cruel and should have never been allowed.

He sees the ill-executed killing as further evidence of the lean financial times at KWS. He adds, however, that there is actually no legislation criminalising consumption of game that dies from causes other than poaching.



--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"


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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: The Hunger for Nyama [Re: NitroX]
      #18420 - 25/08/04 12:03 AM

Youths Hurt in Fight Over Jumbo Meat

The East African Standard (Nairobi)
August 24, 2004
Thuo Gitu
Nairobi

Several youths were injured as they fought over elephant meat in Limuru, Kiambu on Sunday night.

Some received cuts on their hands while others squared it out over the juicy pieces of the pachyderm.


Four elephants and a calf that had earlier terrorised residents of Lari had inadvertently lost their way back to Aberdare Forest and found themselves in the congested Bibirioni village.

Policemen felled the four after an eight-hour hide and seek that saw several ramshackle homes felled by the six-tonne elephants.

At one time, the locals, majority of whom had never seen a live jumbo, watched in disbelief after one of them slipped into a pit latrine and cheered wildly as it struggled to extricate itself.

Youths armed with pangas, axes, knives and power saws trailed the beasts in anticipation of 'godsend manna' while urging the rangers to finish off the animals.

Chaos erupted soon after the rangers put the jumbos down leaving the locals to share the uninspected meat.

The jumbos have been crossing the area when migrating from the Aberdares to the southern Rift Valley.



--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"


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EricD
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Reged: 27/02/04
Posts: 4636
Re: The Hunger for Nyama [Re: NitroX]
      #18424 - 25/08/04 01:30 AM

John,

The fact that the locals didn't wait for the animals to die before cutting into them is of no suprise. I have never been on a continent where animals are treated as poorly as in africa. And I've been around to quite a few unsavioury places. Animal beatings and abuse of both household and farm animals were a common sight for us thru the whole continent from Morocco in the north to Mozambique in the south. Donkeys that had been harnessed with god knows what, so the skin and meat was rubbed off, and thus a large portion of their shoulder blades sticking out were sights that we'll always remember...

In reply to:

one had demolished a pit latrine and slipped into it with the hind legs.





My only hope is that the bastards got dysentry from the juicy, "marinated" elephant legs...

Erik D.


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atkinson6
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Reged: 26/01/04
Posts: 678
Loc: Idaho
Re: The Hunger for Nyama [Re: EricD]
      #18695 - 31/08/04 07:55 AM

Maybe some of you have never been hungry!!

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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: The Hunger for Nyama [Re: atkinson6]
      #18699 - 31/08/04 09:50 AM

In reply to:

Maybe some of you have never been hungry!!




Not being incendiary Ray, but ...

Maybe many of us in the West think beyond the next harvest. Even though the current harvest is enough food for two years, maybe we should just sit around drinking pombo (beer) instead of working the next harvest. Afterall if the harvest after that fails, we can just let the old woman starve or the youngest kid. This is the African mentality.

Were these people "starving"? Maybe for meat but probably not grain. I haven't eaten goose for a while so I think cutting it up while it is still alive is worth it.

I don't see a "starving" argument for people that start to butcher a still living animal or whom work their donkeys to death with all sorts of wounds caused by neglect.

Would you treat one of your horses this way?



--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"


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