Mali hires dogs to sniff out ivory trade

Hoping to slow and ultimately halt the illegal ivory trade in West Africa's Mali, an anti-poaching team recently brought three Dutch spaniels into its ranks to locate smuggler hideouts.

An elephant walks through Tanzania's Selous wildlife reserve, described by the United Nations as one of Africa's largest remaining wilderness areas as of August 2016.

Greg Armfield/AP/File

July 10, 2017

In an effort to save one of Africa's last desert elephant herds, Mali has employed Mitch, Bobby, and Amy – Dutch spaniels with a nose for sniffing out illegal ivory.

The chocolate-colored spaniels are the newest members of an anti-poaching brigade set up to dismantle ivory trafficking networks that have devastated elephant herds in Mali, General Birama Sissoko, an advisor to the environment ministry, told Reuters.

Poaching has been rampant since Tuareg rebels and Islamists took over the north of the country in 2012. French forces pushed them back a year later, but lawlessness still reigns and ivory smuggling has flourished. Trade in elephant tusks funds militants, the United Nations says.

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Only about 300 elephants are left in Mali. About 167 have been slaughtered since fighting broke out in 2012 and a system of local self-policing fell apart, the environment minister said earlier this year.

"There is a stock of ivory that circulates. If we can get hold of the ivory, we can work backwards until we get hold of the poachers," Mr. Sissoko told Reuters.

The anti-poaching team will take the dogs on searches when they get intelligence about traffickers' hideouts, and they should be able to help police make arrests, said Susan Canney, director of the Mali Elephant Project, which partnered with the US-based Chengeta Wildlife organization to obtain the dogs.

No poaching has been detected since the unit was founded in February, but that could be because poachers are simply laying low for now, said Ms. Canney.

"This should be game-changing," Canney said. "Poachers and traffickers are still there. This could catch them red-handed."

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Mali's elephants roam the northern Gourma region, where Islamist and separatist groups still frequently stage attacks.

Elephant tusks from Mali are thought to be sold on the black market for up to 3 million CFA francs (US$5,000), Canney said.