
70 South African white rhinos relocated to Rwanda
KIGALI - Rwanda said on Tuesday that 70 white rhinos had been successfully relocated to the Great Lakes nation after a two-day journey of some 3,000 kilometres (over 1,800 miles) from South Africa.
It was the largest ever relocation of rhinos, which can weigh up to two tonnes, Rwandan officials said.
Once abundant across sub-Saharan Africa, rhino numbers have dramatically fallen due to hunting by European colonisers and large-scale poaching.
The animals were transported in two loads of 35 -- first aboard a Boeing 747, then by road -- from South Africa's Munywana Conservancy to Akagera National Park in Rwanda, or about 3,000 kilometers as the crow flies, according to the Rwanda Development Board (RDB).
A "dedicated veterinary team will closely monitor their health and behaviour for several weeks to ensure proper adaptation to their new environment and management of any stress associated with the move", it said in a statement.
The move was part of African Parks' Rhino Rewild Initiative, supported by The Howard G. Buffett Foundation, and aims to support population growth and secure a new breeding stronghold in Rwanda.
According to the International Rhino Foundation (IRF), rhino poaching in Africa rose by four percent from 2022 to 2023, with at least 586 rhinos poached in 2023.
The southern white rhino, one of two subspecies, is now listed as "near threatened", with roughly 17,000 individuals remaining, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
The northern white rhino has all but vanished, with only two females left alive.
Hashtags

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

IOL News
3 days ago
- IOL News
Runaway bears steal honey and sleep it off
Two young bears named Lucy and Mish escaped from their enclosure earlier this week and headed straight for their food store, where they gobbled up a week's worth of honey before falling asleep, the park said on social media. IN the fairy tale, Goldilocks enters the home of the three bears to eat their porridge and sleep in their beds. But at the Wildwood Devon conservation park in Britain, it's the bears who are doing the breaking and entering - and sleeping. Upon learning about the two escapees, staff quickly escorted the 16 visitors on-site to a secure building, following the park's 'code red' protocol, said Mark Habben, the director of zoological operations at Wildwood Trust, the conservation charity that runs the park in southwest England. The police arrived, as did the emergency team armed with firearms, prepared for the worst, he said. But the 5-year-old bears, much like most human 5-year-olds, appeared to want snacks more than anything else. The bears never made it beyond the staff-only food storage area, where park staff monitored them both on the ground and via CCTV until they voluntarily returned to their enclosure. The food delivery had just arrived an hour before, Habben said in an interview, and the bears bypassed the vegetables to head straight for the sweet treats. 'Just like kids,' he laughed. The brother and sister plowed their way through the apples, bananas and peanut butter before discovering the honey. They ripped the lid off the plastic container and took turns dipping their paws into the golden goo, 'making a right old mess,' Habben added. With all the park's carnivores, the keepers do what is called recall work with them to condition them to return to their enclosures, Habben said. Hence, Mish and Lucy understand to return at the sound of a bell that is followed by the sound of their enclosure door sliding open, Habben explained. Mish immediately ran back into the enclosure at the sound of the door sliding open, Habben said, with Lucy following soon after at the sound of the bell. They then proceeded to romp around their enclosure in the throes of a sugar rush before promptly falling asleep in what appeared to be a sugar crash coma. 'They're naughty bears,' Habben said. 'They're very naughty bears.' This sort of 'incredibly inquisitive, playful and adventurous' behavior is fairly typical for Mish and Lucy, who are still considered young bears, said Paul Whitfield, the director general of the Wildwood Trust, in an interview. 'Them doing exactly what they're not supposed to is sort of what we expect from them.' Mish and Lucy are European brown bears, which are classified by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as a species of least concern, although the group notes that 'there are many small, isolated populations that are threatened.' In Albania, where Mish and Lucy were rescued, European brown bears are classified as vulnerable. They were so young when they were found abandoned in a snow drift in the Albanian mountains that their rescuers had to bottle-feed them, according to Whitfield. Their rescuers tried to release them back into the wild after they were weaned 'but all they did was look for the people who were trying to release them,' Whitfield said. They arrived in Wildwood Devon in 2021, where they now live in a 1.5-acre natural enclosure where they can play and climb trees and be fed fresh salmon in the autumn in addition to the nuts and berries they receive year-round, Whitfield said, describing them as 'incredibly pampered and spoiled bears.' Mish and Lucy will soon be living with two more cheeky young bears. Malenky and Nanuq are 2-year-old siblings who were born in a sanctuary in Belgium to a mother bear who had been rescued from the conflict in Ukraine. They are currently living in a separate part of the enclosure, Habben said, and the keepers had been distracted watching them play with a tractor tire when Mish and Lucy made their great escape through a part in the enclosure that hadn't been properly closed. It's unclear at the moment which sibling pair will be the worst influence on the other, given that Malenky and Nanuq's main hobby at the moment appears to be digging up their pond and locating pipes in the concrete. 'They are also very naughty,' Whitfield said. 'It looks like we'll have our hands full in the future.'

The Star
16-06-2025
- The Star
‘If required, we will do it again': SANDF Chief Rudzani Maphwanya welcomes troops from DRC mission
Jonisayi Maromo | Published 6 hours ago Jubilant members of the South African National Defence Force (SANDF) landed at the Air Force Base Waterkloof in Tshwane on Sunday, where they were welcomed by the SANDF top brass led by Chief of the SANDF, General Rudzani Maphwanya . The SANDF members arrived in a chartered Air Tanzania Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner in the evening of Sunday, where they individually met and shook hands with the military leadership. In high spirits, the SANDF members were singing and dancing as they queued to meet Maphwanya. Afterwards, they were assembled in a building where Maphwanya addressed them, before the troops left for demobilisation in Bloemfontein. 'Some of you, when we met in Goma (city in DRC) you were saying this old man is going to leave us here. I heard it. Now you are back home, welcome back home. I am smiling because I am happy. I came to salute you, and I will continue to salute you for the good work that you have done. 'Your stories are better told by those who were on the other side of the barrel, because they know, they felt it. They are the ones that attested, so be proud of what you were doing. If we are required to do so, we will do it again,' Maphwanya addressed the uniformed troops, with the majority of the soldiers responding: 'Yes sir'. 'If we are required to do so, we will do it again, and I will go with you,' Maphwanya said to applause and cheers from the troops. On Sunday, IOL reported that the second contingent of 257 South African troops coming from a mission in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo was arriving at the Air Force Base Waterkloof. The SANDF announced the arrival of the second group of soldiers returning from the SADC Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (SAMIDRC). SANDF spokesperson, Rear Admiral Prince Tshabalala said a third group is also expected to return to South Africa on Monday afternoon. 'This phased return is part of the SANDF's planned withdrawal from the mission area. Upon their return, the troops will undergo the standard demobilisation programme, which includes health screenings, psychological support, and reunification services,' said Tshabalala. On Friday night, IOL reported that videos shared by the defence ministry showed soldiers in uniform dancing and chanting on arrival at the Waterkloof Air Force Base, welcomed by airbase staff with cheers and fist-bumps. The troops were deployed under a Southern African Development Community (SADC) mission sent to the war-torn country in December 2023 to help restore peace and security in the region. But the SADC said in March it would end its military mission in the mineral-rich area after 17 of its soldiers were killed. AFP reported that earlier this year, fighting in the region erupted once more when the Rwandan-backed M23 force seized large swathes of DRC's north and south Kivu provinces -- both of which border Rwanda. Last month, Maphwanya provided clarity on the phased withdrawal. He explained that the movement of personnel and logistics started on April 29, 2025, with the departure of the first group from eastern DRC via road through Rwanda to Tanzania. He reassured the nation that most logistical equipment will be transported by sea from Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania, to South Africa. [email protected] IOL News


The South African
11-06-2025
- The South African
70 South African white rhinos relocated to Rwanda
Rwanda confirmed that 70 white rhinos had been successfully relocated to the Great Lakes nation after a two-day journey of some 3 000km from South Africa. It was the largest ever relocation of rhinos, which can weigh up to two tonnes, Rwandan officials said. Once abundant across sub-Saharan Africa, rhino numbers have dramatically fallen due to hunting by European colonisers and large-scale poaching. The animals were transported in two loads of 35 – first aboard a Boeing 747, then by road – from South Africa's Munywana Conservancy to Akagera National Park in Rwanda, or about 3 000km as the crow flies, according to the Rwanda Development Board (RDB). A 'dedicated veterinary team will closely monitor their health and behaviour for several weeks to ensure proper adaptation to their new environment and management of any stress associated with the move', it said in a statement. The move was part of African Parks' Rhino Rewild Initiative, supported by The Howard G. Buffett Foundation, and aims to support population growth and secure a new breeding stronghold in Rwanda. According to the International Rhino Foundation (IRF), rhino poaching in Africa rose by four percent from 2022 to 2023, with at least 586 rhinos poached in 2023. The southern white rhino, one of two subspecies, is now listed as 'near threatened', with roughly 17 000 individuals remaining, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). The northern white rhino has all but vanished, with only two females left alive. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news. By Garrin Lambley © Agence France-Presse