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Thursday March 28, 2024

S Africa’s top poacher-hunting pooch flies into battle

KRUGER NATIONAL PARK, South Africa: Barking and snarling in his cage, “Killer” — South Africa’s most successful poacher-catching canine — looks ready for another helicopter mission tracking down armed hunters who slaughter rhinos for their horns.In the first half of this year, Killer has already helped rangers arrest more than

By our correspondents
July 29, 2015
KRUGER NATIONAL PARK, South Africa: Barking and snarling in his cage, “Killer” — South Africa’s most successful poacher-catching canine — looks ready for another helicopter mission tracking down armed hunters who slaughter rhinos for their horns.
In the first half of this year, Killer has already helped rangers arrest more than 15 poachers in the Kruger National Park as authorities try in vain to stem a rapid rise in the number of rhino being killed.
Chosen for his focus and ferocity, the six-year-old jet black and tawny brown Belgian Malinois is the champion of the four-legged stars serving on the front lines of the vicious anti-poaching war.
“He’s had very good success so far, he’s very good on human scent tracking,” Johan de Beer, kennel master at the Kruger canine unit, told AFP.
De Beer, a barrel-chested man with a salt and pepper goatee, said that despite his name Killer is a gentle dog who is great at his job.
“He bites, but we don’t use him that much to bite,” said De Beer.
“He’s actually a very placid dog. He likes riding in a chopper, stuff like that, he’s quite adventurous.”
Since 2007, rhino poaching has risen rapidly every year in the Kruger as animals are killed for their horn, used for its supposed medicinal qualities in China, Vietnam and Thailand.
In 2014, a record 1,215 rhino were killed and that number is set to be exceeded this year.
Amid the carnage, the Kruger canine programme has been a rare bit of good news thanks to dogs like Killer and Gladys, a lively Springer Spaniel who sniffs out guns and ammunition at park gates.
Kruger authorities now plan to boost the number of dogs from 29 to more than 40 by the end of the year.
“The dogs are contributing a huge success to catching poachers,” said De Beer, adding that the hunters — who are often trained gunmen from bordering Mozambique — have adapted their strategies to try to evade capture.
“They got clever, they dropped chillies (chilli peppers) on the trail, but it didn’t work, the dogs still found them,” he said laughing.
Yet a dog is only as good as his handler — and it is the special bond between Killer and his handler Amos Mzimba that sets them apart.
“We make a good team because of our mutual understanding of each other, our companionship,” said Mzimba, who practices drills with Killer every day, rewarding him by playing ball games.
A typical assignment sees Killer and Amos rushing by helicopter to wherever a poacher has been spotted or a rhino carcass discovered, and then tracking the suspect through the bush for as far as eight kilometres. For those who knew Killer as a puppy, his fame does not come as a surprise.