Uganda Wildlife officials have arrested four people over the alleged poaching death of Rafiki, a well-known silverback whose name means “friend” in Swahili.
Rafiki, a member of the Nkuringo gorilla group in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, was first reported missing on June 1, 2020 however, the searchers found the body of Rafiki in Hakato area inside the Bwindi Impenetrable Forest National Park, according to a statement issued by Uganda Wildlife Authority.
A post-mortem report found that Rafiki died after having “sustained an injury by a sharp device/object” that penetrated the abdomen and internal organs.
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Byamukama confessed to killing Rafiki in self-defense, claiming he had gone hunting with a one Bampabenda Evarist when they encountered the group, when the silverback charged, he speared it, or so he said.
We have arrested four people over the death of Rafiki, the Silverback of Nkuringo Gorilla group in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park. They will be prosecuted in the courts of law. See statement below; pic.twitter.com/Hf17vfsmL3
— Uganda Wildlife (@ugwildlife) June 12, 2020
He also admitted that he also shared some of the bushpig meat with Museveni Velance and Mubanguzi Yonasi.
With the assistance of the Local Council Chairman of Murole Village Ngabirano Pascal UWA apprehended the suspects on June 7.
Nkuringo is the first gorilla group to have been habituated in the southern section of the park more than two decades ago and has been under monitor by UWA since 2004, according to Gorilla Tracking Africa. The group was originally named for the founding alpha silverback and Rafiki’s father Nkuringo, whose name translates as “Round Hill”. Silverback gorillas are the leader of the group and get their name from their back fur, which takes on a silver color as the animal ages.
Mountain gorillas, as their name suggests, live in high mountain elevations typically between 8,000 and 13,000 feet, according to the World Wildlife Fund. Decades of civil unrest across their home continent of Africa has led to habitat loss, disease, and illegal poaching that threaten the species. Gorillas are considered endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Though populations are generally increasing, it is estimated that there are around 600 mature individuals in the forests of Rwanda, Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
At the time of Rafiki’s death, the Nkuringo group had 17 members: one silverback, eight adult females, two juveniles, three infants, and three blackbacks, which are young gorillas between eight and 12 years old.
The suspects are currently held at Kisoro Police Station