Chinese workers in Zimbabwe are buying up the local wildlife for
dinner, feasting on endangered tortoises, pythons, leopards — and even
village dogs.Viewed as prestigious dishes, they would be expensive to
serve at banquets back in China. But in Zimbabwe they are relatively
cheap. Worse yet, in this cash-strapped country there’s a lack of
resources to thwart the appetite for endangered game, conservation
groups say.
China is investing significantly in mining, agriculture and construction, and its companies bring along thousands of workers.
Where there are Chinese in Africa, illegal trade in rare animals
inevitably increases, according to experts. In Kenya, elephant poaching
rose sharply along roads built by Chinese construction crews, and
markets in Ethiopia cater to the Chinese demand for ivory chopsticks and
other illicit souvenirs.
One recent case in Zimbabwe involved the gruesome discovery of meat
and skeletal remains of 40 tortoises, during a raid on Chinese workers’
homes in Masvingo province. The endangered Bell’s Hinged tortoises had
been dropped into boiling water while still alive in order to separate
the meat from the shell, police and animal welfare officials said.
Authorities also found 13 live Bell’s Hinged tortoises — which are
protected under international laws governing trade of endangered species
— kept in steel drums without water or food.
Four Chinese workers were fined $300 each and deported over the
killing of endangered tortoises “for personal consumption.” In some
parts of China, tortoises are used to make a very expensive soup.
“Our wildlife remains a legacy for future generations of Zimbabweans
and we should jealously guard their future wellbeing,” the Zimbabwe
National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ZNSPCA) said
at the time.
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