September 8th, 2017
Three rangers have been killed in separate countries in a deadly month for wildlife defenders.
A ranger at Serra da Capivara national park, in Brazil’s
north-eastern Piaui region, was killed by hunters on 18 August. Edilson
Aparecido dos Santos and two other colleagues were patrolling the park
when they were ambushed by a group of four armed men who are believed to
have been hunting in the park illegally. Dos Santos was killed in the
shootout that followed, while the other two rangers were injured.
They were protecting the Serra da Capivara park, a Unesco world heritage site home to 25,000-year-old rock paintings.
Dos Santos was a contractor from the company Thor, working for the
Chico Mendes Institute for Biodiversity Conservation (ICMBio). ICMBio
said in a statement that “both ICMBio and Thor are taking steps to
provide support to staff and their families, and are collaborating with
police authorities to clarify the facts”.

The same week in Mali, Corporal Souleyman Tangara of the country’s combined army/ranger anti-poaching brigade, died along with a UN peacekeeper at the hands of jihadists in Douentza on 14 August. Tangara’s brigade, tasked with protecting the country’s last desert elephants, were responding to a call to assist the United Nations whose base was under attack in what the UN has described as an act of terrorism. Two of the gunmen died in the violence. “This gives a clear picture of the hazards the brigade, trainers and indeed people of this area face on a day-to-day basis,” said Nigel Kuhn, combat tracking trainer at Chengeta Wildlife, an NGO based in Mali.
“The secretary general stresses that attacks targeting United Nations peacekeepers may constitute war crimes under international law,” a spokesperson for António Guterres said in a statement. The security council extended its condolences to the victims, and stated any terrorist acts are “criminal and unjustifiable”, irrespective of their motivation.
The Mali attack happened on the same day that three rangers were killed protecting Virunga national park in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and just two days before renowned conservationist Wayne Lotter, 51, was murdered by an unknown gunman in Tanzania. It is believed the killer may have followed and targeted Lotter, a South African national who had been working in Tanzania for many years exposing countless wildlife poachers and traffickers.
“Wayne’s shocking murder was most likely intended to shut down and hinder theconservation cause he worked tirelessly for, and to scare off any who dare to follow in his footsteps. But what has become apparent since Wayne’s passing, is that the opposite is occurring, as Wayne would have done and wanted himself,” said Sean Willmore, founder and director of the The Thin Green Line Foundation and president of the International Ranger Federation, in a statement.
“The conservation community will not cower in silence. Today and each and every day, we will continue to defend that which we all know needs defending. In the face of incredible dangers and hardships, rangers will continue to lace up their boots and head out on patrol and stand resolute on the front line.”
- To support rangers and their families, visit the Thin Green Line Foundation website.


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