“This moment marks the beginning of a new rhino story for Kidepo Valley National Park,” UWA’s executive director James Musinguzi is quoted by Reuters as saying.

“Translocation of these rhinos is the first step in restoring a species that once formed part of the park’s natural heritage,” he added.

Musinguzi said the initiative is guided by a study that looked at habitat suitability, ecological needs and security conditions and found that Kidepo was one of the best sites for successfully reintroducing the species.

The UWA said a secure rhino sanctuary outfitted with perimeter fencing, access roads, firebreaks, ranger facilities, water systems and monitoring technology was in place to ensure the animals are effectively protected and managed.

The two rhinos were moved to Kidepo, a vast expanse of savannah in the remote north-east of the country, from a privately owned ranch in Nakasongola, about 100 km (62 miles) north of the capital, Kampala.

The ranch has been breeding rhinos since 2005, when it imported four southern white rhinos from a Kenyan game reserve.

Poaching is still a challenge in Uganda, where authorities have arrested and prosecuted individuals found with ivory, pangolins and other endangered species, conservationists report.

The illicit rhino horn market remains lucrative fuelled by their use in traditional medicine and their value as status symbols in several Asian countries.

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) classifies the southern white rhino as “near threatened” saying their population is decreasing. A survey from 2020 said there were just over 10,000 of the huge mammals in existence.