Roger Gower was shot Friday while flying on a joint operation with
Tanzanian wildlife authorities who were tracking the poachers, the
Friedkin Conservation Fund, which oversees some wildlife areas in
Tanzania, said on its website.
"This tragic event again highlights the appalling risk and cost of protecting Tanzania'
s wildlife," the Texas-based group said.
Three suspects were arrested, said Jumanne Maghembe, Tanzania's minister
for tourism and natural resources. The minister pledged that any other
suspects will be arrested in security operations after the attack in
Maswa wildlife reserve, near Serengeti National Park.
Lazaro Nyalandu, a former minister of tourism and natural resources, wrote on Twitter that Gower was killed by AK-47 assault rifle fire.
"You loved our country and I knew you on many flights we took together," Nyalandu wrote.
A co-pilot survived with injuries, Tanzanian authorities said.
Britain's Foreign Office confirmed the death of a Briton in Tanzania and
said it was "providing assistance to the family at this difficult
time."
Rangers discovered the carcasses of three elephants that were killed by
the same group of poachers that fired on the helicopter, said Paschal
Shelutete, spokesman for Tanzania's parks service.
Maswa, the park where Gower was operating, lies on the southwest
boundary of Serengeti. The region's massive wildebeest migration passes
through Maswa in January and February, according to the Friedkin
Conservation Fund. The park's rangers encounter poachers on a regular
basis, it said.
Tanzania has been identified as a key hotspot for elephant poachers. The
elephant population declined by 60 percent to about 40,000 since 2009,
according to a census announced last year.
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