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Guardians of a Threatened Species Will Soon Be Extinct
A ragtag band of men that sought to give the Tibetan antelope a chance against poachers has succumbed to bureaucracy.
By CHING-CHING NI, Times Staff Writer
SHANGHAI--Despite its growing fame, western China's Wild Yak Brigade was
ordered this month to disband and give up its proud name.
A handful of ranking officers of the brigade, which crusades against
poaching of endangered Tibetan antelopes, will be transferred to
unspecified jobs. The remaining two dozen men will be absorbed by a rival
group.
Just weeks before the announcement, the brigade--known in Chinese as
the Yemaoniu Dui--had been awarded a $37,000 grant from a Beijing-based
environmental group to continue its work. Private supporters in China and
around the world, including some Times readers, had sent donations after
learning about this ragtag army of men who risk their lives to patrol the
forbidding terrain of the Kekexili wilderness.
Members of the group had prepared themselves for being disbanded. For
eight years, impoverished Zhiduo County in Qinghai province had struggled
to fund their missions. It was a costly affair that left the brigade more
than $30,000 in debt. Private donations and a daredevil spirit enabled
the battle to last as long as it has.
Three years ago, the provincial government formed the Kekexili Natural
Preserve Protection and Management Bureau on the uninhabited high plain
to increase protection for the antelopes. No one could explain why the
experienced brigade members were not included in the better-funded troop
of rookies back then. Neither is it clear why the good name of the
Yemaoniu Dui could not be preserved under the new administration.
"I don't feel good, but I have to follow orders," said Jin Yanzu by
telephone from the brigade's abandoned home base in Golmud city. He is
one of the officers who will be transferred to a Zhiduo County position.
Also departing will be Liang Yinquan, the group's captain, who has been a
father figure for the younger men.
As one of the founders, Jin has seen two previous leaders killed for
the cause and numerous other men put their lives on the line.
"I leave with only half a body," said Jin, who, like many of the
brigade members, is ravaged by a stomach ailment and other physical
problems caused by the primitive working conditions. "My heart will
always stay in Kekexili."
Officials from the newer group say both the Tibetan antelopes and the
Wild Yak Brigade men will be better off under a central bureaucracy. What
the bureau lacks in experience it makes up for in money, trucks and guns.
The brigade members will get a raise, to about $49 a month from about
$32. But the men say it remains to be seen how their new bosses will put
the bureau's resources to use.
According to members, the brigade's possessions--from the grant
received last month to the beat-up jeeps that kept the group going--will
be returned to the Zhiduo County government.
Nearly 20,000 Tibetan antelopes, or chirus, are slaughtered each year.
Their fine wool is smuggled out of China and made into expensive
shahtoosh shawls that are sold illegally in the West.
Despite their limited resources, brigade members have uncovered nearly
100 poaching operations and confiscated more than 8,600 pelts during
their tenure.
But they were far outgunned by the poachers. When they began their
campaign eight years ago, more than 200,000 antelopes roamed the
highlands. Only about 30,000 remain.
The Kekexili plateau is the only place in the world where these rare
animals are found. If the killing doesn't stop, conservationists say, the
Tibetan antelopes could be wiped out in 20 years.
Search the archives of the Los Angeles Times for similar stories about:
China,
Endangered Species,
Poaching,
Wild Yak Brigade (Organization). You will not be charged to look for stories, only to retrieve one.
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