Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumHow Did Rifles With an American Stamp End Up in the Hands of African Poachers?
HOEDSPRUIT, South Africa High-powered hunting rifles are the tools of the trade for poachers in South Africa and Mozambique. Steady and deadly accurate, the rifles are capable of dropping a rhinoceros with one shot from long distances, and are a major reason the rhinos in those African countries, highly valued for their horns, are dwindling toward extinction.
Three years ago, Sandy McDonald began finding the rifles, left behind by poachers, scattered near the dead rhinos he found in the game reserve he owns in Mozambique, just across the border from South Africa.
Mr. McDonald immediately recognized the weapons. They were .375-caliber Safari Classics, made by CZUB or just CZ, a firearms manufacturer based in the Czech Republic. Upon closer inspection, Mr. McDonald noticed something else on the rifles. Carved into the metal were the words CZ-USA, Kansas City, KS, suggesting that the weapons were from the American subsidiary of the arms company.
Coming from a firearms background I recognized that these were rifles that are quite common in the U.S., Mr. McDonald said. It left me wondering how they got out of the U.S. and into the hands of Mozambican poaching syndicates.
His question is at the heart of multiple investigations by a congressional committee and an array of federal agencies into whether an American gun manufacturer has become entangled in the shadowy and illegal world of arms smuggling and wildlife poaching that both President Trump and former President Barack Obama have committed to combating. Neither CZ nor its American subsidiary has been accused of a crime by federal authorities.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/how-did-rifles-with-an-american-stamp-end-up-in-the-hands-of-african-poachers/ar-BBRpJhk?li=BBnbcA1
FBaggins
(26,727 posts)Is there any reason to believe that the specific weapons were ever even sent to the US?
NickB79
(19,233 posts)My CZ 527 says "Made in the Czech Republic" on the barrel.
One of their major selling points is that they still use Old-World craftsmanship, steel and walnut in Europe, not automation, plastic and aluminium in the US.