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szdaily -> Kaleidoscope -> 
Botswana wants Angola’s exiled elephants to return home
    2020-11-06  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

BOTSWANA may have found a solution to its elephant overpopulation: It’s going to encourage some of them to leave the country.

Botswana’s tourism industry, which accounts for a fifth of the economy, is heavily reliant on the world’s biggest elephant population, but the animals have become a political issue as there are too many of them and they destroy crops and occasionally trample villagers. Now, elephants are beginning to migrate into neighboring Angola and the governments of both countries are helping them do so by removing land mines left over from Angola’s civil war and tearing down fences.

“It’s the idea that we have, particularly looking at the overpopulation we have,” said Philda Kereng, Botswana’s environment minister, in an interview Tuesday.

Botswana’s 135,000 elephants mostly live in a 520,000-square-kilometer area known as the Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area, which spans five countries and is home to almost half of the world’s African elephants. Angola’s elephants were pushed across the border by a decades-long civil war that ended in 2002.

Before the war, Angola had about 100,000 elephants, compared to less than 10,000 today, according to researchers. Most lived in the lush southeastern highlands, from which rivers feeding Botswana’s Okavango Delta wetlands originate.

“Southern Angola has prime elephant habitat, and, if conditions are safe for elephants, they will return to Angola in great numbers,” said Mike Chase, the founder and director of research non-profit Elephants Without Borders.(SD-Agencies)

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