Zambezi police investigate poaching of elephants
Police in the Zambezi Region apprehended a 37-year-old man found in possession of 24 elephant tusks during a joint operation with the Ministry of Environment and Tourism last night. The tusks are alleged to have come from Botswana, where the elephants were poached, and entered Namibia through the Batubaja Area in Linyanti Constituency. All 24 tusks were found loaded into a vehicle with an expired disc licence driven by a suspect who was allegedly called to provide transport after the car in which they were transported initially ran out of fuel. Twelve elephant tail hairs used to make bracelets were also found together with the tusks. Police Commander for the Zambezi Region, Commissioner Andreas Shilelo, who was part of the operation, told nbc News at Liselo Checkpoint that seven Zambian nationals evaded arrest and are still on the run. "The area they crossed from, the area of Batubaja, Kwando River, is where they crossed when they went and when they came back, so we now operate on intelligence-led information; that's the only way to get hold of them, so that is why we got it right, and we will continue pursuing others, not only this one but there are others."
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