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Voortrekker's Killing Creates Uproar

Namibia gets its 'most famous elephant' Voortrekker killed by trophy hunter to 'generate funds'. The killing of a 50-y...

Namibia gets its 'most famous elephant' Voortrekker killed by trophy hunter to 'generate funds'.
The killing of a 50-year alpha elephant bull in Namibia has caused an uproar in the southern African nation, with conservation and tourism groups accusing the government of authorizing the hunt for the animal without proper cause.

The elephant was killed last week in the Omatjete area, 230 km (140 miles) from the coastal town of Swakopmund, by a government-appointed hunter who paid 120,000 Namibian dollars ($8,500). Authorities had declared it a “problem-causing animal”. The elephant, popularly known as “Voortrekker”, was part of the rare Ugab desert-adapted herd.

“It’s unfortunate that the elephant was put down but we were left with no other alternative after this specific animal continued to cause damages to property in the area,” Ministry of Environment and Tourism (MET) spokesman Romeo Muyunda told media on Tuesday.

Muyunda said the ministry granted the permit for Voortrekker to be shot because the government was afraid that farmers living in the Omatjete area would carry out their threat to kill elephants that were destroying their properties. “It was better for us to do it this way than to ignore it, and allow the community to take the law into their own hands and destroy all the elephants,” he said.

Conservancies near Ohungu Conservancy, where the bull elephant was shot, had objected to the killing of the animal saying that elephants do not cross into communities. “We understand that complaints have been received from communities living in the Omatjete area. The Ugab west population of desert elephants do not cross into those communities,” said the Ugab Concerned Conservancies.

“These elephants are our resources, and we object to them being hunted for problems caused by different populations of elephants,” the group said. Local media called the elephant an “icon” and said tourists paid a lot of money to see it and other Ugab desert-adapted elephants.

The death of Voortrekker comes four years after Cecil the Lion was killed by an American tourist in Zimbabwe causing an international uproar.