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FLORA AND FAUNA
New boss aims to get Kenya's wildlife service back on track
By Tristan MCCONNELL
Nairobi (AFP) March 23, 2016


First contact in decades with rare rhino in Indonesia's Borneo
Jakarta (AFP) March 23, 2016 - Environmentalists have made physical contact with a Sumatran rhino on the Indonesian part of Borneo island for the first time in over 40 years, the WWF said Wednesday, hailing a "major conservation success".

The critically endangered rhino was caught in a pit trap this month in East Kalimantan province in an area close to mining operations and plantations, where the WWF said it was struggling to survive.

The female animal, thought to be aged around six, is now in a temporary enclosure and will later be airlifted by helicopter to a safer habitat on Borneo, Efransjah, head of environmental group WWF-Indonesia, told AFP.

The contact with the rhino comes after environmentalists discovered in 2013 that the Sumatran rhino was not extinct on Indonesian Borneo -- as had long been thought -- when hidden cameras captured images of the animals.

Borneo is the world's third-largest island and is shared between Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei.

Efransjah, who like many Indonesians goes by one name, hailed the capture of the rhino on March 12 as "an exciting discovery and a major conservation success".

"We now have proof that a species once thought extinct in Kalimantan (Indonesian Borneo) still roams the forests, and we will now strengthen our efforts to protect this extraordinary species."

The capture of the rhino was a joint effort between environment ministry officials, the WWF and the Rhino Foundation of Indonesia.

The Sumatran rhino is the smallest of the living rhinos. They are the only Asian rhino with two horns, and are covered with long hair.

There were once Sumatran rhinos all over Borneo but their numbers have dwindled dramatically, with poaching, and expansion of mining and plantation operations considered the main reasons for the decline.

The International Union for Conservation of Nature classifies the Sumatran rhino as critically endangered. The WWF estimates there are fewer than 100 remaining in the wild.

There are only a few substantial populations still in existence, most of them on Indonesia's main western island of Sumatra.

The wild population of Sumatran rhinos on the Malaysian part of Borneo was declared extinct last year, according to the WWF.

Kenya's new wildlife chief must overhaul a national agency described in a recent government investigation as having "lost its way".

Conservationists welcomed the February appointment of Kitili Mbathi as director general of the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) hoping the 57-year old former banker will revive the organisation responsible for protecting the country's world famous parks and reserves as well as its threatened populations of elephant, rhino and lion.

"KWS has been going through some challenges, mainly of a financial nature," Mbathi told AFP during an interview in his breezy corner office at KWS headquarters, squeezed between a new dual-lane highway and the 117 square kilometre (29,000 acre) Nairobi National Park.

"The challenges are ones that any chief executive faces: declining revenues, increasing expenditure, a deficit situation. It's how to balance the books."

Mbathi has spent almost his entire professional career in financial services and banking -- most recently as chief executive of Kenya's CFC Stanbic Bank.

But he was persuaded to apply for the KWS job by his old friend Richard Leakey, a renowned Kenyan palaeoanthropologist and conservationist, who was last year appointed chairman of the board.

- 'Dream Team' -

The two men have worked together before. In 1999, during the waning years of President Daniel Arap Moi's rule, Mbathi was part of Leakey's "dream team" of experts drafted in from the private sector to revive Kenya's moribund economy.

But they were stymied and after just 20-months Leakey quit his job as head of the civil service and Mbathi and his colleagues were dismissed.

Mbathi returned to banking but now Leakey has persuaded Mbathi to join him again.

"This certainly wasn't on my career plan, but working with Richard [Leakey] presented a great opportunity," he said. "I did enjoy working in the public service before, it did end horribly, but that just reinforced in my mind the need to try to bring private sector expertise into the public sector to have an impact."

Nor was it a financial decision. "The pay cut was huge," said the formerly well-paid executive.

The challenges ahead are great too. A 2014 Task Force on Wildlife Security report painted a damning picture of KWS as an incompetent and bloated bureaucracy, a "top-heavy organisation" whose "core business... has become shrouded with confusion".

It said 57 directors and assistant directors drew good salaries for filling office space at the Nairobi headquarters, while thousands of rangers in the field lived in appalling conditions, poorly equipped and earning as little as $123 (109 euros) a month. The report also cited examples of corruption with KWS officials embroiled in poaching and the illegal wildlife trade.

KWS, it concluded, required "a major overhaul... to deal with the enormous security threats and the wildlife decline Kenya is facing."

- Huge ivory burn -

Mbathi said that overhaul is underway. He is working to restructure and streamline the convoluted organisation and said "ranger welfare" is a priority. So is choking off corruption.

"I come from a background in the banking sector where there's zero tolerance for corruption so you can be sure that any incidents of corruption that we come across we will tackle with a very heavy hand," he said.

Mbathi pointed to an ex-KWS employee recently arrested in the Kenyan port of Mombasa for selling ivory and four police officers arrested with ivory in Nairobi.

One area where Kenya is already seeing improvements is wildlife protection. In 2015, 93 elephants were killed, down from 164 the year before.

"It is a constant battle," Mbathi said. "Our challenge is to increase our preparedness to deal with poachers, which means better equipment and better intelligence capabilities."

It also means tackling demand in the Far East, where raw ivory fetches $1,100 (980 euros) a kilo.

Next month, Kenya is set to burn the vast majority of its ivory stockpile -- as much as 120 tonnes -- in a highly publicised display led by President Uhuru Kenyatta and attended by a gaggle of celebrities, conservationists and heads of state.

An audit last year showed Kenya holds a total of 138 tonnes of ivory -- mostly stored in a padlocked low-ceilinged, musty cellar at KWS headquarters. But some of the tusks that are evidence in ongoing criminal investigations will not be destroyed.

"We don't believe there is any intrinsic value in ivory, and therefore we're going to burn all our stockpiles and demonstrate to the world that ivory is only valuable on elephants," said Mbathi.


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