Rhino Horns Worth $5.2M Stolen in South Africa

Rhino horn is sold in Asian pharmacies and over the Internet at about $65,000 a kilogram, making it more expensive than gold, platinum and cocaine.

A Southern White Rhino named Bella eats with her one-day-old baby at iwa Rhino Sanctuary in Uganda.STRINGER / Reuters
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JOHANNESBURG — Rhino horn stock piles worth over $5.2 million have been stolen from a South African game park office, the raided tourist agency said on Tuesday, in the first known theft of its kind.

Thieves on Monday broke into the Mpumalanga Tourism and Parks Agency and cut into a strong box, making off with 112 pieces of rhino horn, weighing 175 pounds.

"It's the first time there has been a break-in at our premises, it was obviously well planned," the parks' spokeswoman Kholofelo Nkambule said.

Elephant ivory, rifles and ammunition, which were in the same safe, were left untouched, Nkambule said.

Poaching rhinos for their horns is a growing problem in South Africa and a lucrative business for organized criminal networks but it is unusual for thieves to target stockpiles.

Most of the rhino horns were from de-horning operations, which is an attempt by local authorities to decrease poaching and to protect the rhino species.

The biggest market for illegal rhino horn in recent years has been Vietnam, where the product is sold in pharmacies and over the Internet at about $65,000 a kilogram, making it more expensive than gold, platinum and cocaine.

More than 1,000 rhinos were poached last year for their horns in South Africa, an increase of 50 percent from the previous year, a government department said in January.

— Reuters