
Zimbabwe has a deadly elephant problem
This innovative system, launched last year by the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority and the International Fund for Animal Welfare, tracks elephants fitted with GPS collars. The goal is simple but crucial: prevent dangerous encounters between humans and elephants. These encounters are becoming increasingly frequent as climate change exacerbates competition for dwindling resources like food and water.
'When we started it was more of a challenge, but it's becoming phenomenal,' said Sibanda, 29, one of the local volunteers trained to be community guardians.
For generations, villagers banged pots, shouted or burned dung to drive away elephants. But worsening droughts and shrinking resources have pushed the animals to raid villages more often, destroying crops and infrastructure and sometimes injuring or killing people.
Zimbabwe's elephant population is estimated at around 100,000, nearly double the land's capacity. The country hasn't culled elephants in close to four decades. That's because of pressure from wildlife conservation activists, and because the process is expensive, according to parks spokesman Tinashe Farawo.
Conflicts between humans and wildlife such as elephants, lions and hyenas killed 18 people across the southern African country between January and April this year, forcing park authorities to kill 158 'trouble' animals during that period.
'Droughts are getting worse. The elephants devour the little that we harvest,' said Senzeni Sibanda, a local councilor and farmer, tending her tomato crop with cow dung manure in a community garden that also supports a school feeding program.
Technology now supports the traditional tactics. Through the EarthRanger platform introduced by IFAW, authorities track collared elephants in real time. Maps show their proximity to the buffer zone — delineated on digital maps, not by fences — that separate the park and hunting concessions from community land.
At a park restaurant one morning IFAW field operations manager Arnold Tshipa monitored moving icons on his laptop as he waited for breakfast. When an icon crossed a red line, signaling a breach, an alert pinged.
'We're going to be able to see the interactions between wildlife and people,' Tshipa said. 'This allows us to give more resources to particular areas."
The system also logs incidents like crop damage or attacks on people and livestock by predators such as lions or hyenas and retaliatory attacks on wildlife by humans. It also tracks the location of community guardians like Capon Sibanda.
'Every time I wake up, I take my bike, I take my gadget and hit the road,' Sibanda said. He collects and stores data on his phone, usually with photos. 'Within a blink,' alerts go to rangers and villagers, he said.
His commitment has earned admiration from locals, who sometimes gift him crops or meat. He also receives a monthly food allotment worth about $80 along with internet data.
Parks agency director Edson Gandiwa said the platform ensures that 'conservation decisions are informed by robust scientific data.'
Villagers like Senzeni Sibanda say the system is making a difference: 'We still bang pans, but now we get warnings in time and rangers react more quickly.'
Still, frustration lingers. Sibanda has lost crops and water infrastructure to elephant raids and wants stronger action. 'Why aren't you culling them so that we benefit?' she asked. 'We have too many elephants anyway.'
Her community, home to several hundred people, receives only a small share of annual trophy hunting revenues, roughly the value of one elephant or between $10,000 and $80,000, which goes toward water repairs or fencing. She wants a rise in Zimbabwe's hunting quota, which stands at 500 elephants per year, and her community's share increased.
The elephant debate has made headlines. In September last year, activists protested after Zimbabwe and Namibia proposed slaughtering elephants to feed drought-stricken communities. Botswana 's then-president offered to gift 20,000 elephants to Germany, and the country's wildlife minister mock-suggested sending 10,000 to Hyde Park in the heart of London so Britons could 'have a taste of living alongside elephants.'
Zimbabwe's collaring project may offer a way forward. Sixteen elephants, mostly matriarchs, have been fitted with GPS collars, allowing rangers to track entire herds by following their leaders. But Hwange holds about 45,000 elephants, and parks officials say it has capacity for 15,000. Project officials acknowledge a huge gap remains.
In a recent collaring mission, a team of ecologists, vets, trackers and rangers identified a herd. A marksman darted the matriarch from a distance. After some tracking using a drone and a truck, team members fitted the collar, whose battery lasts between two and four years. Some collected blood samples. Rangers with rifles kept watch.
Once the collar was secured, an antidote was administered, and the matriarch staggered off into the wild, flapping its ears.
'Every second counts,' said Kudzai Mapurisa, a parks agency veterinarian.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Telegraph
4 hours ago
- Telegraph
Colombian mercenaries hired to fight for Sudan rebels
Colombian mercenaries are fighting for Sudanese paramilitary rebels in a famine-stricken refugee camp in Sudan. Fighters from the South American nation had been seen inside Darfur's Zamzam camp, which was captured by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in April, local authorities said. The camp, for hundreds of thousands displaced by the country's war, has been at the centre of the humanitarian crisis engulfing the country, and last year was subject to a rare international declaration of famine. Mohamed Khamis Douda, a spokesman for the Zamzam camp administration, told the Sudan Tribune: 'We have witnessed with our own eyes a dual crime: the displacement of our people last April at the hands of the RSF militia, and now the occupation of the camp by foreign mercenaries'. Mr Douda described seeing armed, Spanish-speaking groups moving freely 'among the rubble of homes and the unburied bodies of victims'. His remarks followed the broadcast of video clips by the Sudanese army, purportedly recovered from a dead fighter's phone, which appeared to show Spanish-speaking mercenaries inside the camp. Colombian media have reported that as many as 400 former soldiers have been employed in the African country, in a battalion known as the Desert Wolves. Whistleblowers have claimed they had signed up with an Emirati security company and been duped into believing they would be guarding oil facilities. Instead they found themselves on the front lines of a war which has been running for more than two years. The war between the Sudanese army and the RSF erupted in April 2023 when the former allies clashed over plans to integrate their forces. Zamzam is only seven miles from the city of El Fasher, the last army holdout in the Darfur region. The RSF made quick gains in central Sudan, including the capital Khartoum, at the start of the war, but the army pushed them westward this year. That has led to an intensification in fighting in El Fasher. The city's fall would give the RSF control over nearly all of Darfur - a vast region bordering Libya, Chad, Central African Republic and South Sudan – and pave the way for what analysts say could be Sudan's de facto division. The war has become a free-for-all of competing regional powers, with the United Arab Emirates accused of arming and backing the RSF, because it fears Islamism within the Sudanese army. The UAE denies supporting the RSF.


The Independent
5 hours ago
- The Independent
Islamic State-linked fighters displace over 46,000 people in northern Mozambique, UN says
Attacks by insurgents in Mozambique 's northern Cabo Delgado province displaced more than 46,000 people in the space of eight days last month, the United Nations migration agency said Monday. The International Organization for Migration said nearly 60% of those forced from their homes were children. There have been no reports of deaths in the attacks. In a separate report, the U.N.'s humanitarian office said the wave of attacks between July 20 and July 28 across three districts in Cabo Delgado caused the surge in displacements. The southern African nation has been fighting an insurgency by Islamic State-affiliated militants in the north for at least eight years. Rwandan soldiers have been deployed to help Mozambique fight them. The jihadis have been accused of beheading villagers and kidnapping children to be used as laborers or child soldiers. The U.N. estimates that the violence, and the impact of drought and several cyclones in recent years, has led to the displacement of more than 1 million people in northern Mozambique. Doctors Without Borders said it has launched an emergency response to help thousands of recently displaced people who now live in camps in Chiure, the district that experienced the worst of the attacks. Cabo Delgado has large offshore natural gas reserves, and the insurgency caused the suspension of a $20 billion extraction project by French company TotalEnergies in 2021. ___


Times
9 hours ago
- Times
Zambia's president demands proof his rival is dead
Weeks after the death of Zambia's former president, a long-standing, bitter rivalry with his successor rumbles on — as lawyers for the government demand proof that Edgar Lungu is actually dead. Lungu, who was the southern African country's president for six years until 2021, was reported to have died, aged 68, on June 5. His death shone a spotlight on the long-running feud with Hakainde Hichilema, his 63-year-old successor, who spent about 100 days in detention in 2017, when he faced treason charges as opposition leader. Hichilema was at the time accused of endangering Lungu's life after his motorcade allegedly refused to give way to that of the president. That stint in prison for Hichilema was not an isolated brush with the authorities under Lungu — he is said to have been arrested 15 times and his political supporters routinely harassed. In the immediate aftermath of Lungu's death — reported to have been from complications after surgery at a South African hospital where he was being treated for an undisclosed illness a — row blew up in the capital, Lusaka, over plans for a state funeral. It is understood that Lungu's family objected to the government's conditions for the body to lie in state, and as a result, decided to hold his funeral in South Africa. The Zambian government was then said to have attempted to block that plan and imposed a state funeral. Meanwhile, sources in the country described the former president's body as 'languishing in limbo'. And within the last few days, a letter from lawyers to Lungu's family has demanded access to the body. In the letter, seen by The Times, government lawyers said they were formally requesting the family 'make the necessary arrangements for a representative of our client to attend at the funeral parlour where the body of the late President Lungu is currently being kept for the purposes of authenticating and identifying the body'. The letter went on to attempt to reassure that 'the process will not cause any harm or prejudice to the family,' arguing that it was 'a necessary and respectful step to bring certainty to a matter of public and personal importance'. However, the letter carried an explicit threat that officials would not countenance no for an answer. 'In the circumstances,' read the letter, 'a refusal or failure to provide the necessary consent will regrettably compel our client to question the bona fides of the family's position, and we will be left with no alternative but to approach the court for appropriate relief. We trust, however, that this will not be necessary.' A Lungu family spokesman, Makebi Zulu, said that the government's 'vindictive interference' was a 'betrayal of basic human decency'. 'This shameful harassment of a grieving family shows complete disregard for their rights, causing immeasurable pain during this time of mourning,' he said. 'It is disgraceful that the government insists it is entitled to the former president's body whilst denying that same right to his family. 'Ordinary Zambians watching this disgraceful treatment must be appalled at how their government conducts itself.' Lungu lost the 2021 presidential election by a landslide to Hichilema in what was seen as a devastating rebuke to the former president, who had presided over significant economic decline, soaring debt and allegations of corruption. More than half of voters in Zambia are under the age of 34 and have virtually no economic prospects. But instead of that election calming disquiet in the country, disillusionment with Hichilema's administration grew as Zambia's economy continued to stagnate. As a result Lungu announced in 2023 that he was returning to the political fray — but in response, the authorities were said to have stripped him of retirement benefits. Lungu and his family also alleged that they were victims of police harassment, and the former president complained last year that he was 'virtually under house arrest'.