We want to buy food and supplies for training and working on missions for our canine superheroes, whose super-snouts capable of detecting ivory, pangolin scales, bushmeat or living animals anywhere help them to protect endangered wildlife in Congo.
Author: Save Elephants, z.s.
All or nothing. Project finished on Apr 29, 2017 at 11:29.
We want to keep fighting for the African wildlife which is threatened by poachers and traffickers. For that, we need our dogs to be in perfect condition, and to ensure their welfare and all of their needs. Good feeding, veterinary care, vaccinations, antiparasitics and logistics on the missions – this all requires steady funding. The money raised by this campaign will cover part of these essential needs.
We believe that enforced nature conservation is needed in order to conserve the rare wildlife in Central Africa. Sniffer dogs offer part of the solution. Besides this, many African countries are attempting to develop in a sustainable manner and act responsibly towards the environment, and solid nature protection is a vital component of such development. After our past successful missions and results we need to grow and become stronger to continue in our fight. Please help us.
Once upon a time there was a pristine rainforest - a virgin jungle full of life. It was a perfectly balanced ecosystem consisting of an endless number of plant and animal species, lasting from time immemorial. Then humans came. The trees started to be felled for timber and animals hunted not only for survival, but also for their tusks, skins, scales or claws. The intact rainforest shrank and the animal populations declined drastically.
However, there are many people ready to fight for the survival of this unique wildlife. Two among them, Naftali Honig and Arthur F. Sniegon, launched a sniffer dog programme for the detection of wildlife products in Congo in 2014 – the first of its kind in the region. The programme uses specially trained dogs to sniff out ivory, pangolin scales, leopard skins, live animals (crocodiles, turtles, primates, African grey parrots, etc.), all kinds of so-called “bushmeat“, and guns and ammunition. The programme started as a branch of PALF, active in Congo since 2008 as a part of the widely spread EAGLE network within Africa. The use of dogs is focused on key locations for wildlife trafficking, such as the airport, roadblock checkpoints, markets and logging concessions.
The project started in 2014 with two male malinois dogs, Shon and Rick, who were trained in Israel. Local Congolese dog handlers were selected and trained from scratch - an especially peculiar task in a country without a tradition of keeping dogs as companions or working animals. Nonetheless, we succeeded. This was to a great extent thanks to our Czech volunteer dog trainer, Mrs. Hana Böhme, who came to Congo repeatedly, and one year later (in 2015) fully prepared and donated her great female malinois dog named Cama. The same year, during a break from successful “poacher hunting“, Cama and Shon managed to meet in privacy and started a new generation of Congolese and African sniffer dogs. The team grew and transformed into an independent project called Sniffer Dog Programme (PCR) in Congo, which is administered and supported by a British organisation, The Aspinall Foundation. The major partners of PCR in the Czech Republic are the NGO Save-Elephants, z.s. and the ZOO Liberec.
The wildlife laws in Congo are quite well written and sound. The problem is the lack of enforcement of these laws. In reality, almost all species are hunted and the existing anti-poaching and law enforcement system is in most cases not able to address this problem adequately. There is a big difference between traditional subsistence hunting for one’s own needs and commercial hunting and trading. This has led to the problem of over-exploitation, especially of bushmeat animals. A big proportion of the hunted animals are therefore not consumed locally by forest and rural communities, but rather are transported in vast volumes to urban centres or even abroad to satisfy the never-ending hunger for special meats directly from the forest. People who have the alternative to buy fish or meat from domesticated animals are responsible for “eating out“ forests hundreds or thousands of kilometers away.
The highly corrupt and negligence-susceptible social environment in Congo (and beyond!) is giving way to law-breaking and allowing poachers and traffickers to prosper in their business. When needed, they can always bribe their way out of any problem. This is another aspect of the hard work that our and other projects must face. PALF and other projects we collaborate with have their own teams of lawyers and legal advisors who make sure that culprits will be delivered to the justice system without the chance to escape punishment easily.
When carrying out search operations on the ground, we collaborate with the Congolese Ministry of Environment and with the Gendarmerie. We focus on regular random checks as well as intelligence-led controls at road checkpoints, airports and on logging roads in the forested parts of Congo. During the two active years of the project in 2015 and 2016, nearly 40 individuals (poachers or traffickers) were arrested following detection by our dogs, ivory was found, and live pangolins and pangolin scales were detected. Several guns, leopard skins and ammunition were also found, and hundreds of live reptiles and thousands of pieces of bushmeat were seized. Several poachers’ camps have also been destroyed during our missions.
From the original adult trio of dogs only two remain, the males Shon and Rick. The female Cama passed away during a tragic road accident which hit our team in mid-2016. Nevertheless, all 7 of her offspring are a great legacy to Cama's previous fight for wildlife. We have trained the puppies and distributed some of them to different conservation projects across Africa. Orion, the biggest male, is now guarding chimpanzees and people in the Tchimpounga Chimpanzee Sanctuary (run by the Jane Goodall Institute). Another 4 puppies called Django, Dzamba, Ndolo and Pluto have been sent for special training in Uganda, and 3 of them will remain in East Africa with different conservation programmes. One of the dogs in Uganda will soon come back to Congo to join his two remaining siblings, Doli and Titan, whom we have fully trained on our own. All of the dogs in our project are trained by positive reinforcement of the desired performance, using a toy as a reward for successful detection of illegal items.
Each of our four dogs in Congo is paired with a Congolese dog handler, creating independent units. Daily training sessions will assure that soon even the youngsters Doli and Titan will be ready for real action. The training schedule is being prepared and progress surveilled by Hana Böhme, who regularly visits the project. Our staff checks all of the dogs daily and if there is a health issue, a nearby veterinary clinic is able to help. When not on a mission in the field, the dogs are guarded 24/7 by the handlers themselves, as well as by our own day- and night-guards, to ensure the highest possible level of security.
The main supporter of the Sniffer Dog Programme in the Czech Republic is the NGO Save-Elephants, z.s., founded by Arthur F. Sniegon, the current leader of the Congolese Dog Project by The Aspinall Foundation. Save-Elephants, in partnership with the ZOO Liberec, will transfer all funds raised directly to Congo.
Thank you! Only thanks to your help and contribution we have already reached the goal of EUR 3,696 to support our Sniffer Dog Programme (PCR) in Congo, and can continue its growth. Our dog superheroes are happily wagging their tails and look forward to when their good food arrives as well as to…
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