[The rhino horn rush has
gotten so out of control that it has exploded into a worldwide criminal
enterprise, drawing in a surreal cast of characters — not just Thai
prostitutes, but also Irish gangsters, Vietnamese diplomats, Chinese
scientists, veterinarians, copter pilots, antiques dealers and recently an
American rodeo star looking for a quick buck who used Facebook to find some
horns.]
Joao Silva/The New York Times |
KRUGER NATIONAL PARK, South Africa — They definitely did not look like ordinary
big-game hunters, the stream of slender young Thai women who showed up on the
veld wearing tight bluejeans and sneakers.
But the rhinoceros
carcasses kept piling up around them, and it was only after dozens of these
hulking, relatively rare animals were dead and their precious horns sawed off
that an extravagant scheme came to light.
The Thai women, it ends
up, were not hunters at all. Many never even squeezed off a shot. Instead, they
were prostitutes hired by a criminal syndicate based 6,000 miles away in Laos to
exploit loopholes in big-game hunting rules and get its hands on as many rhino
horns as possible — horns that are now worth more than gold.
“These girls had no idea
what they were doing,” said Paul O’Sullivan, a private investigator in
Johannesburg who helped crack the case. “They thought they were going on
safari.”
The rhino horn rush has
gotten so out of control that it has exploded into a worldwide criminal
enterprise, drawing in a surreal cast of characters — not just Thai
prostitutes, but also Irish gangsters, Vietnamese diplomats, Chinese
scientists, veterinarians, copter pilots, antiques dealers and recently an
American rodeo star looking for a quick buck who used Facebook to find some
horns.
Driven by a common
belief in Asia that ground-up rhino horns can cure cancer and other ills, the
trade has also been embraced by criminal syndicates that normally traffic drugs
and guns, but have branched into the underground animal parts business because
it is seen as “low risk, high profit,” American officials say.
“Get caught smuggling a
kilo of cocaine, you will receive a very significant prison sentence,” said Ed
Grace, a deputy chief with the United States Fish and Wildlife Service. But
with a kilogram of rhino horn, he added, “you may only get a fine.”
The typical rhino horn
is about two feet long and 10 pounds, much of it formed from the same substance
as fingernails. Yet it can fetch nearly $30,000 a pound, more than crack
cocaine, and conservationists worry that this “ridiculous price,” as one
wildlife manager put it, could drive rhinos into extinction.
Gangs are so desperate
for new sources of horn that criminals have even smashed into dozens of glass
museum cases all across Europe to snatch them from exhibits.
“Astonishment and rage,
that’s what we felt,” said Paolo Agnelli, a manager at the Florence Museum of
Natural History, after three rhino horns were stolen last year, including a
very rare one from 1824.
American federal agents
recently staged a cross-country undercover rhino horn sting operation, called Operation
Crash, “crash” being the term for a herd of rhinos.
Among the 12 people
arrested: Wade Steffen, a champion steer wrestler from Texas, who pleaded
guilty in May to trafficking dozens of horns that he found through hunters,
estate sales and Facebook; and two members of an Irish gang — the same gang
suspected of breaking into the museums in Europe.
In an e-mail to an
undercover agent, an Irish gangster bragged: “Believe me WE NEVER LOSES A HORN
TO CUSTOMS, we have so many contacts and people payed off now we can bring
anything we want out of nearly any country into Europe.”
Corruption is a huge
element, just like in the illegal ivory trade, in which rebel groups,
government armies and threadbare hunters have been wiping out tens of thousands
of elephants throughout Africa, selling the tusks to sophisticated criminal
networks that move them across the globe with the help of corrupt officials.
Here in South Africa,
home to the majority of the world’s last surviving 28,000 rhinos or so, the
country is throwing just about everything it has to stop the slaughter —
thousands of rangers, the national army, a new spy plane, even drones — but it
is losing.
The number of rhinos
poached in South Africa has soared in the past five years, from 13 killed in
2007 to more than 630 in 2012. The prehistoric, battleship-gray animals are
often found on their knees, bleeding to death from a gaping stump on their
face.
“Ever seen a dead
rhino?” asked Philip Jonker, who works for a private security firm that has
gone into wildlife protection. “It’s worse than going to a funeral.”
The only answer, some
contend, is to legalize the trade, which would flood the market with rhino
horns, lower the price and dissuade rhino poachers from risking their lives —
or so the argument goes. Rhino horns regenerate, and the horns can be shaved
down every few years and sold off without significantly hurting the animal.
One of most passionate
advocates of this legalization movement is John Hume, a South African
entrepreneur who now owns more than 800 rhinos, with names like Curly, Titan,
Hillary and Pinocchio, and has amassed a 2,000-pound mountain of horn worth
millions of dollars — if he is ever allowed to sell it.
“Why shouldn’t the
person who breeds rhino get a reward?” he asks.
Every time Mr. Hume’s
ranch hands trim down a few rhinos, they organize an armed escort to take the
horns straight to a safe-deposit box in a bank because the same gangs that
waylay armored bank trucks are now cruising around South Africa looking for
rhino horns.
But many wildlife groups
say legalizing the rhino trade would be a disaster.
“The consuming power in
my country is growing so rapidly that the supply would never meet the needs,”
said Jeff He, spokesman for the Chinese branch of the International Fund for
Animal Welfare. “And besides, it’ll always be cheaper to poach an animal than
raise it.”
Kruger National Park, an
enormous wildlife refuge in South Africa’s northeast, is where many rhinos are
being poached. The park lies on the border with Mozambique, a much poorer
country still scarred from years of civil war. Park rangers say Mozambican
gunmen are pouring through Kruger’s chain link fences, downing rhinos left and
right.
Some sophisticated
poaching rings use helicopters to spot the animals and veterinarians to dart
them with tranquilizers. Others don women’s shoes, to leave misleading tracks.
“At any one time, there are up to 10 groups operating inside the Kruger,” said Ken
Maggs, a South African National Parks official. “These guys are trying new
methods daily.”
Scientists say that
maybe a million rhinos once roamed the earth, and for some reason, humans have been
fascinated with the horn for ages. The ancient Persians thought
rhino horn vessels could detect poisons. The Chinese thought rhino horn powder
could reduce fevers. The Yemenis prized the horn for coming-of-age daggers,
presented to teenage boys as a sign of manhood.
In Asia, faith in
traditional cures runs strong, fueling demand as Asian economies grow, though
there is no scientific proof that rhino horn can cure cancer.
In 2008, a Vietnamese
diplomat in South Africa’s capital, Pretoria, was caught on camera
receiving rhino horn — in the parking lot of the embassy.
Around the same time, a Chinese company opened a secretive rhino
breeding center in Hainan Province, reportedly to produce
rhino-based medicine.
In the past 50 years,
the overall rhino population has plummeted by more than 90 percent, despite an
international ban on the trade in rhino parts since 1977.
But in South Africa, it
is legal to hunt rhinos, creating the loophole that the Thai prostitutes
sauntered through. Hunters must agree to keep the horn set (rhinos have a large
front and smaller back horn) as a trophy and not sell it, and hunters are
allowed to kill only one white rhino every 12 months. (Black rhinos are
critically endangered and very few are hunted in South Africa.)
According to South
African law enforcement officials, gang leaders in Thailand and Laos decided
that to maximize the number of rhinos they could kill, they would enlist Thai
prostitutes who were already in South Africa with valid passports, which were
used for the hunting permits. The women then tagged along on the hunts, often
dressed in catchy pinks and blues, but somebody else — usually a professional
hunter — pulled the trigger.
“I don’t know whose idea
it was to use the ladies, but it was a damn good one,” said Mr. O’Sullivan, the
private investigator.
None of the two dozen or
so prostitutes involved have been prosecuted — the intent was to get the big
fish. So Mr. O’Sullivan leaked a photograph of an enormous stockpile of ivory
and rhino horns to one of the women, along with a message for her boss, a
bespectacled Thai man named Chumlong Lemtongthai, that everything was for sale:
“I wanted the big man himself to come here and negotiate.”
Mr. Lemtongthai did
exactly that, and he was arrested soon after. He pleaded guilty and was
sentenced in November to 40 years.
“I do not want to see a
situation where my grandchildren will only be able to see rhino in a picture,”
said the judge, Prince Manyathi.
Gaia Pianigiani contributed reporting from Rome.