What is Animal Poaching?

What is Animal Poaching?
It is the “hunting [of] wild animals for food and entrepreneurial exploitation, including the bushmeat trade for local and urban trade, trafficking (locally and cross-border) and trade in live animals and body parts” (Cadman, 2007).

Tuesday, 1 March 2016

Why Should Animal Poaching Be Considered a Social Injustice?

Animal Poaching does not only affect animals; it affects entire communities and can also affect the economy. Because of this, it is doubly important that humans see the error of their ways and react accordingly.

But, how are communities actually affected?

Well, this occurs on three levels:

1. Members of the communities surrounding game reserves either directly or indirectly benefit from the tourism that occurs in these regions. If the Big 5 became the Big 3 (if elephants and rhinos became extinct), there would be fewer tourists coming to South Africa and as a result fewer people from local communities would be able to be employed. These people and the South African economy would suffer.

2. Many militia groups are involved in animal poaching. These people therefore earn money when they sell rhino horns or elephant tusks; they use this money to buy ammunition which they then use to commit human rights violations (e.g. kidnappings and killings). An example of such a militia group is the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA).

3. Moreover, many Asian gangs are involved in poaching and in the ivory trade; these gangs are often also involved with human trafficking and therefore the money earned from the sale of rhino horns and elephant tusks allows them to continue violating other people’s human rights.

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