Regina Leader-Post

Few details on vow to ban ivory

Optimism Hong Kong will act soon

- SIMON DENYER THE WASHINGTON POST

HONG KONG — It could be the beginning of the end for the illicit trade in ivory.

Last month, on a state visit to Washington, Chinese President Xi Jinping promised to halt the commercial trade in ivory in his country, but gave few details about the timing and extent of such a move.

Now, a senior U.S. government official says the Chinese ban could be in place within a year or so, with very narrow exceptions, describing it as a “huge” deal.

Such a move, conservati­onists say, would be a major step toward ending the poaching crisis that is decimating Africa’s elephant herds.

“This commitment goes all the way up to President Xi,” Catherine Novelli, U.S. undersecre­tary for economic growth, energy, and the environmen­t in the State Department, said. “They have made it very clear this is what they want to do.”

But even as optimism mounts, the spotlight is turning to Hong Kong, which has long been a centre of the global trade in wildlife traffickin­g.

There, the authoritie­s’ reluctance to clamp down on legal ivory traders has allowed a much larger illegal trade to flourish, conservati­onists say, and has establishe­d the territory as a key transit point in the smuggling of ivory from Africa into China.

“Hong Kong has always been the ivory laundry of the world,” said Peter Knights, executive director of WildAid in San Francisco. “The moral imperative has shifted from China and the U.S, who are in a position to say they are going to close the ivory trade down, to Hong Kong to do the same.” First, the good news. The United States and China have agreed to enact “nearly complete bans” on ivory import and export, “and to take significan­t and timely steps to halt the domestic commercial trade of ivory.”

China is by far the biggest ivory market in the world, with a flourishin­g domestic ivory carving and trading industry that is supposed to use only old stockpiles but actually provides cover for the laundering of huge quantities of newly poached ivory.

Ivory remains a status symbol in China, but outlawing the domestic trade would go a long way to making it as unfashiona­ble there as it is in the West.

Wildlife groups said the U.S.-China accord offers real hope for Africa’s elephants, now being slaughtere­d in their tens of thousands every year. Knights called it a “historic” step.

In the past, China had argued that ivory carving was part of its cultural heritage, but it has gradually come to realize that its role in the poaching industry was damaging its global reputation, particular­ly in Africa.

Novelli said she expected China to ban its domestic ivory trade “sometime within the next year or so,” with “extremely narrow” exceptions — perhaps for items like musical instrument­s or certain antiques.

Authoritie­s there are already reviewing what regulation­s needed to be amended, and discussing with experts how to go about buying back existing ivory stockpiles, she said. Time is of the essence. Africa’s elephant herds have dwindled from around 1.2 million 40 years ago to between 400,000 and 500,000 now. Central African forest elephants could be extinct within the next decade at current trends.

Attention is now swinging towards Hong Kong. In a September report, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) said the city had the largest retail ivory market in the world, while an investigat­ion by Save The Elephants found that well over 90 per cent of the ivory objects here are bought by mainland Chinese tourists.

Hong Kong allows ivory stockpiled before a 1989 global ban to be freely sold, but, under internatio­nal regulation­s, it must not be taken out of the territory. Traders have to register the weight of their stockpiles, but critics say there is no regulation on sales.

Video filmed by independen­t investigat­ors for WildAid and WWF showed traders boasting they could easily replenish their pre-1989 stock with newly poached ivory.

Indeed, official figures show barely any reduction in ivory stockpiles in Hong Kong for several years, despite a surge in tourism from China.

Hong Kong’s customs seized a record 8.04 tonnes of ivory in 2013, and last year the government began publicly destroying tons of seized ivory from its stockpile, as a signal of its commitment to ending the trade.

But wildlife experts say Hong Kong has been unwilling to move against the retail traders whose industry provides a cover for smuggling, while penalties for smuggling are low. Only a total ban on the ivory trade, as China has promised, would give police the power they need to stem smuggling, they argue.

Christine Loh, Hong Kong’s undersecre­tary for the environmen­t, said her government was moving to “plug holes” in the system, but argued traders had a “legitimate interest” in the ivory business, and would have to be compensate­d for their stockpiles, a potentiall­y costly process.

Rubbish, says Knights, who argues traders have had 26 years to get rid of their old stockpiles, have been constantly replenishi­ng them with poached ivory, and could simply be given another six months to clear their shelves, without compensati­on.

After a series of successful public education campaigns by civic groups, public opinion in Hong Kong supports a ban on ivory trading.

So why is the Hong Kong government so reluctant to act?

It is either corruption or bureaucrat­ic inertia, says Knights. “The bureaucrat­s’ bottom line — don’t ever admit to a problem, or you might have to do something about it, and if you do that, you might get something wrong and get blamed.”

Neverthele­ss, Loh said Hong Kong would collaborat­e with the Chinese authoritie­s. While the autonomous territory has its own legislativ­e process, a ban on the ivory trade in China would make it “untenable” for Hong Kong not to also tighten its laws, she said.

In the United States, President Barack Obama has tightened restrictio­ns on the ivory trade, while California this month became the third state to ban ivory sales.

The administra­tion intends to restrict the import of ivory by hunters to “two elephant trophies per year per hunter,” Novelli said, and only from countries where it determines that income from hunting “contribute­s to the survival of the species.”

That won’t be enough to satisfy everyone, given the outcry that followed the killing of Cecil the lion in Zimbabwe by a Minnesota dentist, or this month’s shooting of one of Africa’s biggest elephants by a German hunter.

But Novelli said that “as long as it is severely regulated and under tight conditions, we did not think we should do a complete ban” on trophy hunting.

“THIS COMMITMENT GOES ALL THE

WAY UP TO PRESIDENT XI.”

CATHERINE NOVELLI

 ?? LAM YIK FEI/Getty Images ?? It could be the beginning of the end for the illicit trade in ivory. Chinese President Xi Jinping promised to halt the commercial trade in ivory in his country.
Now, a senior U.S. government official says the Chinese ban could be in place within a...
LAM YIK FEI/Getty Images It could be the beginning of the end for the illicit trade in ivory. Chinese President Xi Jinping promised to halt the commercial trade in ivory in his country. Now, a senior U.S. government official says the Chinese ban could be in place within a...
 ?? PHILIPPE LOPEZ/AFP/Getty Images files ?? A pedestrian walking past a shop window displaying ivory carvings in Hong Kong.
PHILIPPE LOPEZ/AFP/Getty Images files A pedestrian walking past a shop window displaying ivory carvings in Hong Kong.

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