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South Sudan soldiers poach elephants in DR Congo
By Tristan MCCONNELL
Nairobi (AFP) Oct 29, 2015


Scientists appeal for ambitious microbiome study
Miami (AFP) Oct 29, 2015 - A group of 48 scientists from 50 US institutions Wednesday called for more ambitious research into the tiny microorganisms that play a huge role in health, energy and farming.

Known as the Unified Microbiome Initiative Consortium (UMIC), the effort aims to vastly improve research on microbiomes, whether they be in the soil, the water or the human gut.

The project would uncover the role of individual microbes -- which include fungi, bacteria, viruses, algae and more -- and how they communicate with each other, their hosts, and their environment.

The US-based program would have a 10-year timeframe, and could be complemented by a European effort, scientists wrote in the journals Science and Nature.

"Over the past 20 years, new technologies have reshaped our understanding of the essential roles microbes play on our planet," said a statement by Miyoung Chun, executive vice president of science programs at The Kavli Foundation.

"A Unified Microbiome Initiative would develop the transformative tools and research teams we need to harness the power of these communities to improve human health, agricultural productivity, bioenergy production, and environmental stability."

There are believed to be 100 trillion microbes in the human gut, and they are critical to health and development, but scientists are only just beginning to understand why.

a Those calling for the new effort hail from the Department of Energy, national laboratories, universities and research institutions.

The group came together during a series of "coordinated but separately convened meetings held by The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy and The Kavli Foundation," said a statement from the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University.

"Technology has gotten us to the point where we realize that microbes are like dark matter in the universe," said Eoin Brodie, deputy director of the Climate and Ecosystem Sciences Division at the DOE's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

"We know microbes are everywhere, and are far more complex than we previously thought, but we really need to understand how they communicate and relate to the environment."

According to Jeff Miller, co-author of the Science paper and director of the California NanoSystems Institute, the initiative "might hold the key to advances as diverse as fighting antibiotic resistance and autoimmune diseases, reclaiming ravaged farmland, reducing fertilizer and pesticide use, and converting sunlight into useful chemicals."

Soon after dawn on a Wednesday morning in mid-June wildlife rangers on patrol in Garamba National Park, a vast swathe of northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo, were ambushed.

A group of armed men attacked the anti-poaching patrol killing one ranger and two Congolese soldiers, each shot dead at close-range.

"They knew what they were doing," said Garamba's chief warden.

"There were 15 of them, judging from the tracks, who clearly had a military background, they were not simple poachers. They killed our guys from five metres away, execution style."

According to the chief warden the killers were members of South Sudan's national army (SPLA), who now pose one of the biggest threats to DR Congo's dwindling population of elephants, and the rangers protecting them.

"The SPLA target the rangers specifically, they set up ambushes to hunt us down. It is unlike anything I have ever seen," he said.

The chief warden's account is contained in a new report by Ledio Cakaj, a researcher for The Enough Project pressure group, investigating the role of armed groups in the illegal ivory trade.

The report titled "Tusk Wars" finds evidence that Joseph Kony's rebel Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) is trading ivory for weapons with Sudanese soldiers and merchants. While Khartoum-backed Janjaweed militias are also involved in poaching, it blames armed forces from South Sudan for the bulk of the killing.

"According to park rangers, the biggest current threat to both elephants and wildlife rangers in Garamba are poachers from South Sudan, reportedly part of the police or the national army," Cakaj said.

- 'Ready to die for ivory' -

Roughly twice the size of Luxembourg, Garamba loses up to 150 elephants each year with park authorities estimating South Sudanese poachers are responsible for 80 percent of the killing.

"The South Sudanese are ready to die for ivory, rather than spare the elephant or the ranger. Because it is so lucrative," said Garamba's chief warden.

There are believed to be thriving illegal ivory markets in the South Sudanese towns of Yei and Maridi where a kilo (2.2 pounds) of ivory can fetch hundreds of dollars.

In South Sudan, too, elephant populations have been hit by a rise in poaching by armed groups since civil war began in December 2013, according to surveys conducted by the Wildlife Conservation Society.

Cakaj said that some poachers in Garamba were spotted wearing SPLA uniforms, while SPLA uniforms were also found alongside elephant tusks in poaching camps, but he said there remains "a lack of clarity" as to whether the soldier-poachers are serving members, renegades or deserters.

South Sudanese soldiers are also part of a 2,500-strong US-trained African Union Regional Task Force meant to hunt down the LRA.

The Enough Project estimates Kony to have just 120 fighters under his command, while President Obama has deployed roughly the same number of US Special Forces advisors to stop him.

Despite its diminished size, the group continues to pose a threat, "with 150 recorded attacks and 500 abductions of civilians for the first eight months of 2015 and 200,000 people displaced," according to the report.

Kony himself is believed to be hiding in a Sudan-controlled enclave called Kafia Kingi where he stockpiles his ivory before trading it for food, clothes and ammunition.


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