Free YouTube views likes and subscribers? Easily!
Get Free YouTube Subscribers, Views and Likes

Rhinos Have Been Brought Back From the Brink of Extinction in Zimbabwe | Foreign Correspondent

Follow
ABC News In-depth

In Zimbabwe, the mighty rhino is making a comeback. In southern Africa, the animal was poached to near extinction in recent decades. We visit a wildlife sanctuary, with an elite antipoaching team, to see how the animal is being bought back from the brink. Subscribe: https://ab.co/3yqPOZ5

It's one of the most successful rhino conservation projects in Africa. In southeastern Zimbabwe, a private wildlife sanctuary is working hard to bring endangered rhinos back from the brink.

In decades past, the mighty Black Rhino was poached to near extinction in southern Africa.

Its horn, almost worth its weight in gold, makes it a target for organised poaching gangs.

In 1998, the privatelyfunded Malilangwe Trust had a population of 28 white and 28 black rhinos, imported from South Africa.

Today its rhino population numbers in the hundreds.

Reporter Michael Davie, an Australian born in Zimbabwe, returns home to witness this extraordinary wildlife success story.

He spends time with the sanctuary's highly trained antipoaching team, the Malilangwe Scouts, the tip of the spear against the ever present poaching threat.

"Individually you can't win against poaching and we need every one of us to fight against poachers," says Patrick, a Sergeant in the Scouts. "You have to be a team, a strong one."

Davie captures all the incredible action of the hectic "rhino ops" where specialists dart the animals from helicopters then move in on 4WDs as they dash across the park. Led by ecologist Sarah Clegg, the rhino ops team collect vital data on the herd.

"They've got this reputation of being badtempered and dangerous and they are, but I think it's mostly that they're just such emotional creatures," says Sarah, who's studied the animal for more than two decades.

"They're just insecure, you know? And so they need more love."

Malilangwe increased its rhino population to such an extent that last year, it relocated some of its Black Rhino herd to nearby Gonarezhou National Park — a former killing ground for rhinos.

"It's what we all aim for in our careers as conservationists," says Sarah. "It's a wild park, so being able to put the rhino back into that park is like waking it up again."

This visually stunning story has a powerful message of hope.

"Everyone needs to know the rhino is special," says Patrick.

Read more here: https://ab.co/3y5bMQv

About Foreign Correspondent:
Foreign Correspondent is the primetime international public affairs program on Australia's national broadcaster, ABCTV. We produce halfhour duration indepth reports for broadcast across the ABC's television channels and digital platforms. Since 1992, our teams have journeyed to more than 170 countries to report on war, natural calamity and social and political upheaval – through the eyes of the people at the heart of it all.

Watch more ABC News content adfree on ABC iview: https://ab.co/2OB7Mk1

For more from ABC News, click here: https://ab.co/2kxYCZY

Get breaking news and livestreams from our ABC News channel:    / newsonabc  
Like ABC News on Facebook:   / abcnews.au  
Follow ABC News on Instagram:   / abcnews_au  
Follow ABC News on Twitter:   / abcnews  

Contributions may be removed if they violate ABC’s Online Terms of Use http://www.abc.net.au/conditions.htm (Section 3). This is an official Australian Broadcasting Corporation YouTube channel.

posted by gerifalteez