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Elephants ruthlessly killed by
crazy Rangers and trigger-happy Police.
August 2004
According to eye-witness reports, these elephants couldn't return
to their habitat in the Aberdare forests, because they were
hindered by the partial electric fence, which stands erected in
their traditional return-route.
But instead driving the elephants back on the way they had strayed
from the National Park, game rangers as well as blood&meat-thirsty
villagers drove these elephant further an further into settled
areas until then there was" enough reason" to execute
them.
Shame on you: Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS), Police and
residents of Kinyogoori, Ngarariga and Giogothi villages.
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One of the
elephants which strayed from the Aberdares is stuck in a pit
latrine at Bibirioni village, Kiambu. It was shot dead by
game rangers moments later.
photo by:William Oeri
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Rangers kill
rogue elephants
DAILY NATION
Story by CYRUS KINYUNGU
Publication Date: 08/23/2004
Three stray
elephants were yesterday shot dead by Kenya Wildlife Service
rangers after they terrorised Limuru residents for more than nine
hours.
The beasts, each weighing an
estimated six tons and aged over 10 years, were part of a herd
that had strayed out of the Aberdares' Kereita forest and into
Bibirioni sublocation of Kiambu District.
Residents of Kinyogoori, Ngarariga
and Gitogothi villages were woken up at 5am yesterday by the
beasts, which invaded their farms, destroying crops and fences and
other homestead structures.
They rubbed themselves against
houses, leaving the villagers terrified.
A subchief, Mr Michael Kang'ethe,
said the residents started screaming as early as 5am as the
animals broke through fences, sending their domestic colleagues
scampering for safety.
"Our cattle broke out of their
sheds and ran into the darkness as they escaped from the jumbos,
while the dogs almost got into our houses as they sought
protection," a villager said.
Yesterday, the area was alive with
activity as the residents skipped church services to try to drive
the animals away.
The older villagers played hide and
seek with the beasts as excited children moved closer to get a
glimpse of the huge animals, which they had most probably seen
only in pictures.
As the crowd drove the animals out
of one farm they met another herd approaching. And on turning
back, the pursuers were forced to scamper as the animals went for
them, trumpeting and kicking up dust in anger.
At one point, residents said, a
youth was trampled and injured in the stampede as one elephant
followed close by. Luckily, the animal's attention was diverted
elsewhere and it changed its course.
At Kinyogoori, a colonial reserve
with hundreds of crowded houses, one full-grown bull estimated to
weigh more than 6 tons vented its wrath on farms as it destroyed
maize crops and green vegetables on small plots.
With people surrounding it, the
agitated beast decided to destroy structures in some homesteads.
It trampled down fences, bathrooms, kitchens, gates and granaries.
Attempts by KWS rangers to dissuade
the villagers from following the animal was unheeded even as the
invaders turned brutal.
Minutes before the rangers,
accompanied by administration police, decided to shoot some, one
had demolished a pit latrine and slipped into it with the hind
legs.
It struggled to pull itself out for
over five minutes as hundreds of people gathered around, defying
the rangers' warning that they keep off.
When it finally got out, hundreds
of villagers scampered for safety with the jumbo in hot pursuit.
They were saved by the rangers and
the APs who shot it dead.
And after the rangers removed tusks
from the fallen jumbos, it was all joy as the villagers closed in
with pangas and axes to get a share of the meat.
The villagers almost fought as they
disagreed on how much meat each should carry home.
Even before the beasts were felled,
women carried baskets as their male colleagues toted polythene
bags and machete in readiness for the windfall.
Mr John Githinji of Kinyogori said
the area lies on the elephants' migratory route.
Ngong forest warden Mary Karabui,
who led the operation, said the animals could not be driven back
into the forest as it was dangerous to do so. Owing to the dense
population in the villages, it would be disastrous trying to drive
them back to Kereita forest, more than 10km away.
"We believe the elephants came
from Kereita forest, which is part of the Aberdares. We suspect
they passed between Gatamaiyu and Kinare parts of the
forest," she said.
She explained that KWS was putting
up an electric fence in the section of the Aberdares as a
permanent solution to the problem.
"Plans to put up a live-wire
fence at Gatamaiyu and Kinale parts of the Aberdare forest are at
an advanced stage," she added.
At the time of going to press, two
elephants were still roaming the area. The KWS officials were
still considering driving them back to the forest.
One was at Gitogothi, a stone's throw
away from novelist Ngugi wa Thiong'os home, while the other was
near Kinyogoori High School
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