| CONSUMERS GIVE AVIS THUMBS UP
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| Wednesday, 01 February 2012 00:00 |
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Press Release: Consumers have voted Avis Rent a Car into first spot in the South African Service Awards (Car Hire) with an impressive 90,12%, confirming Avis’ status as the leader in the car rental industry. The South African Service Awards are acknowledged as a premier customer-driven service award system in the country, recognising that in fact, it is the customer who is best able to rate the service he or she receives from any company.
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| SA man hurt in whaler tussle
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| Sunday, 22 January 2012 00:00 |
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Anti-whaling campaigners have vowed to continue targeting Japanese whalers, despite three of their crew members, one of them a South African, being injured this week.
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Government continues to explore ways to curb the increasing killing of rhinos in South Africa, including the possibility of dehorning the animals, Environmental Affairs Minister Edna Molewa said on Sunday.
About 24 rhinos have been killed in South Africa since the beginning of this month, while figures from the South African National Parks (SANPARKS) show that 448 rhinos were killed for their horns last year alone. The most affected areas were said to be in Limpopo and North West provinces.
Experts say the spike in poaching in Africa and South Asia was largely caused by increased demand for rhino horns in Asian traditional medicine. There are still many myths associated with the rhino horn in some Asian countries like China and Vietnam, where it is believed that the horn can heal fever, enhance sexual performance and reduce chances of stroke.
Molewa said it was clear that authorities needed to up their game in curbing the poaching of rhinos.
"It is clear that this is an organised crime and in dealing with organised criminals, we need input and action from all South Africans."
She said a study conducted had indicated that the decision on whether or not to dehorn a rhino population depended on a number of factors, including the level of poaching threat, the availability of funds and the size of the rhino population in question.
"Due to the invasive nature of and expenses associated with dehorning, the intervention should only be considered under conditions of relatively severe poaching threat," Molewa said.
A continuing study commissioned by government will also look into whether legalising trade in rhino horn could help to bring down poaching.
Other measures include the establishment of the National Wild Life Reaction Unit, which authorities are hoping will help in information sharing and curbing pooching in South Africa's largest parks.
Molewa said the South African National Defence Force has also been returned to monitor the 350-kilometre of the national border in Kruger National Park. Most of the country's rhinos are found in Kruger Park, leading to many cases of poaching being reported there.
While the alarming figures of rhino killing in the country had raised concerns among animal rights groups and activists, SANPARKS said it was not yet time to press panic buttons.
According to the organisation's CEO David Mabuza, there are around 22 000 rhinos in South Africa, accounting for 93 percent of the world's rhino population. The rhino population is said to be growing at a rate of six percent a year.
"So while all of us should be worried, it should be noted that the killings have not yet threated the rhino population in general. But if we continue at this rate (of killing), we will start seeing a decline by 2015," Mabuza said.
SANPARKS needs about 1 600 additional rangers to patrol in the Kruger National Park but this would mean an addition R200 million in the budget. - BuaNews |
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| Plan to root out waste tyres
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| Sunday, 22 January 2012 00:00 |
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South Africa's new waste tyre management plan is set to support government's targets to put the country's economy onto a stronger job growth trajectory while meeting ambitious climate change goals, government said on Tuesday.
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| ‘Starving dogs fed sawdust’
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| Sunday, 22 January 2012 00:00 |
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Too poor to feed themselves, let alone their dogs and too attached to their pets to let them go, some residents of Alexandra, Gauteng, have told an animal welfare organisation that they feed their four-legged friends sawdust to keep them full.
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The Department of Water and Environmental Affairs has revealed that 232 suspects were arrested in connection with rhino poaching last year.
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An estimated 50 000 people are reported to have visited wildlife resorts in Limpopo over the festive season - more than double the number of visitors in 2010.
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Government continues to explore ways to curb the increasing killing of rhinos in South Africa, including the possibility of dehorning the animals, Environmental Affairs Minister Edna Molewa said on Sunday.
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The City of Cape Town's intensive public awareness and preparedness campaign on the dangers and prevention of fires within its area of jurisdiction is well underway.
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The white rhino, put out on tender to be hunted, has already been killed.
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| Disturbing dog pic not from SA
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| Sunday, 08 January 2012 00:00 |
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A picture of a mutilated dog's face -- a victim of a firework being thrown at it -- does not originate from South Africa.
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The outcome of COP17 is a historic achievement that will go a long way in furthering the global climate agenda, says the head of the South African COP17 delegation Edna Molewa.
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The South African National Parks (SANParks) and the City of Cape Town are concerned about the growing trend of defacing and disfiguring the natural coastline by stacking rocks to form structures in Kommetjie beaches.
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