JOHANNESBURG
(AP) — Zimbabwe and Malawi are allowing flights by anti-poaching drones as part
of an initiative supported by Google and the WWF conservation group.
The drones,
which resemble large model airplanes, have flown in South African wildlife
areas and are part of the Air Shepherd program of the U.S.-based Lindbergh
Foundation. They can act as a highly visible deterrent to poachers fearing
capture, though vast and rugged terrain as well as legal and bureaucratic
obstacles have hampered some anti-poaching drone projects in Africa.
Officials
in Zimbabwe acknowledge their anti-poaching efforts are in "desperate
trouble" and view drones as a potentially effective tool to protect
elephants and other species that are a pillar of the country's faltering
tourism industry, Otto Werdmuller Von Elgg, operator of the Air Shepherd
drones, said Friday.
One drone
team plans to start operations next week in Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe's
biggest reserve, said Von Elgg, director of the South African drone company
UDS.
Some
poachers in Hwange have used cyanide to poison elephants in large numbers
before cutting off their tusks. Wildlife officials in Zimbabwe lack sufficient
funding and say they need more rangers to patrol the nation's parks.
Von Elgg's
drones started flying this month in Malawi's Liwonde National Park, which is
surrounded by densely populated settlements. African Parks, the
Johannesburg-based group that runs Liwonde, has been relocating some Liwonde
elephants to a more secure reserve in Malawi.
The drones
in Malawi can be used to chase straying elephants back into the park, as well
as monitor illegal loggers who infiltrate Liwonde by riverboat at night,
according to Von Elgg.
The drone
project is backed by WWF, which is using a $5 million grant from Google to
support the use of technology in countering wildlife crime.
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