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And I think the third thing is there was a kind of global recognition that the rhino is unique and that its homeland is also unique. That generated a sense of pride to the local people that the rhino is a part of our heritage.
But you say that the battle is not complete.
First of all, we have to convince people that they can live with the rhino as good neighbors. That's a big challenge. The second is, how do you make a live rhino worth more than a dead rhino? The question then becomes, to whom? As far as I'm concerned, the answer is the community and the people that live in the rhino country. If you can achieve this, then they will live forever. Of course, we're not there. We still have a lot of struggle.
What do you think that people trying to save native wildlife, especially those in other developing countries, can learn from Nepal's efforts to save the rhino?
First of all, generate the political will. Then for us, the support from the World Wildlife Fund and the Smithsonian was very valuable because you need to have good science. But good science by itself is not enough. You need to learn how to change good science into good management. The third thing is you also need to demonstrate you're not only saving a species, you're also saving a whole habitat, and maintaining land, maintaining clean water—the ecological services that are now creeping up as a new science. We also need to link ecology with economics and with the social and political factors in any country. It's hard work.
Nepal has undergone over a decade of violence and political uncertainty, and that may not end even with the April elections. Do you think that the rhinos of Nepal will survive?
You've asked the hardest question. To write that last chapter for me was difficult because I was swinging like a pendulum from one side to the other. The answer changes from day to day. I really don't know, but I must say that one has too be an optimist in our business (conservation). The rhino population has shot down from 550 to about 300 in 2006. You can still go to Chitwan and see the rhinos, but the rhinos I took to Bardia have been wiped out. I can only say that I hope that peace will prevail. With political turmoil, the wild animals are the ones to suffer most.


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