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Kenzodielocke

Member
Oct 25, 2017
12,851
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/articl...rture-death?bftwnews&utm_term=4ldqpgc#4ldqpgc

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Down the road from the crocodile ponds inside Nepal's renowned Chitwan National Park, in a small clearing shaded by sala trees, sits a jail. Hira Chaudhary went there one summer night with boiled green maize and chicken for her husband, Shikharam, a farmer who had been locked up for two days.

Shikharam was in too much pain to swallow. He crawled toward Hira, his thin body covered in bruises, and told her through sobs that forest rangers were torturing him. "They beat him mercilessly and put saltwater in his nose and mouth," Hira later told police.

The rangers believed that Shikharam helped his son bury a rhinoceros horn in his backyard. They couldn't find the horn, but they threw Shikharam in their jail anyway, court documents filed by the prosecution show.
Nine days later, he was dead.

WWF's staff on the ground in Nepal leaped into action — not to demand justice, but to lobby for the charges to disappear. When the Nepalese government dropped the case months later, the charity declared it a victory in the fight against poaching. Then WWF Nepal continued to work closely with the rangers and fund the park as if nothing had happened.

WWF said that it does not tolerate any brutality by its partners. "Human rights abuses are totally unacceptable and can never be justified in the name of conservation," the charity said in a statement.
But WWF has provided high-tech enforcement equipment, cash, and weapons to forces implicated in atrocities against indigenous communities. In the coming days, BuzzFeed News will reveal how the charity has continued funding and equipping rangers, even after higher-ups became aware of evidence of serious human rights abuses.
 

Acevil

Member
Oct 30, 2017
315
That is horrible, but I need something answered for me, when did Buzzfeed become an excellent news source for breaking news.
 
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