Flere NGO’er er gået sammen for at undersøge om den internationalt eftersøgte og berygtede krigsherre, Joseph Kony, står bag drab på elefanter i DR Congo. Deres rapport viser, at Kony og hans milits, “Herrens Modstandshær” (LRA), er involveret i ulovlig handel med elfenben.
WASHINGTON D.C., 4. June 2013: The Lord’s Resistance Army, or LRA, is now using elephant poaching as a means to sustain itself, according to the report “Kony’s Ivory: How Elephant Poaching in Congo Helps Support the Lord’s Resistance Army”.
This report is a co-production of the NGO´s Enough Project, The Resolve, Invisible Children, and the Satellite Sentinel Project (with DigitalGlobe).
LRA leader Joseph Kony—wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes and crimes against humanity — has ordered his fighters to bring him elephant tusks.
Eyewitnesses report that the LRA trades tusks for much-needed resources such as food, weapons and ammunition, and other supplies.
In a visit to Garamba National Park in the DR Congo in January 2013, the Enough Project and the Satellite Sentinel Project documented evidence of LRA poaching operations through interviews with park rangers, LRA escapees, and recent senior defectors.
The report demonstrates how killing elephants in DR Congo is helping to support the LRA’s continuing atrocities across central Africa. It links the group’s activities in Garamba to the growing regional and global ivory trade, which is threatening the survival of African elephants.
With prices at record-high levels, trading illegal ivory offers the LRA another way to sustain itself in addition to its habitual pillaging.Former senior fighters who defected from the group report that the LRA trades ivory for arms, ammunition, and food.
Former captives said that they saw LRA groups in the DRC and the Central African Republic, or CAR, trade ivory with unidentified people who arrive in helicopters. LRA fighters in the park have at times outgunned and outmaneuvered the Garamba park rangers through the use of automatic weapons, satellite phones, and GPS transmitters.
In recent years, elephant poaching has reached record levels across Africa. The killings exceed their reproductive replacement rate, putting Africa’s wild elephants at risk of local extinction.