It is a last kindness. A man in camouflage takes
out a knife and severs the horn of a rhinoceros, depriving the animal of its
most iconic feature. The poachers who have killed this animal have fled,
leaving behind their prize: the keratin that makes up the horn. It’s a
substance so valued for its use in traditional Asian medicine that rhinos are
being slaughtered by the thousands for it. Severing the horn will keep it off
the black market. Even in death, the animal must be maimed to be saved.
That’s a measure of just how dire the present has
become for the rhinos and elephants of Africa. After years of relative calm,
trafficking in species like elephants and rhinos doubled from 2007 to 2013,
largely to meet the growing demand for ivory and other animal products from the
rising consumer class of Asia. By some estimates, wildlife trafficking is the
fourth-largest international crime, carried out by global criminal syndicates
for whom the trade is almost as lucrative as drugs but far safer. There’s even
evidence that poaching now fuels terrorism—militant groups like Somalia’s
al-Shabab derive a portion of their income from wildlife trafficking.
But in the face of loss, there are those who fight
back. David Chancellor’s photographs document the work of the Northern
Rangelands Trust, a Kenya-based NGO that has helped community conservancies
learn to protect the wildlife they live alongside. Sometimes that means
protecting people, as when an ornery elephant is relocated to reduce
human-animal conflict. But often it’s a hard, dangerous battle against wildlife
trafficking. As many as 1,000 park rangers have been killed in battles with
poachers over the past decade. On the black market, slaughtering animals will
always pay better than preserving them.
Yet Chancellor’s subjects soldier on, fighting to
protect beings that cannot protect themselves.
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