China Daily (Hong Kong)

Sick desire for ivory must be removed from people’s hearts

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ZHOU FEI, head of the Wildlife Trade Programme of the World Wildlife Fund China, called Sunday “a day to be inscribed into history” after a ban was introduced on the processing and selling of ivory and ivory products in China. China Daily writer Zhang Zhouxiang comments:

Doubtlessl­y it was a historic day, because the Chinese government has not only issued the ban, but also taken a series of steps to end the ivory trade in the country.

The State Forestry Administra­tion had already ordered all previously legal ivory processing and trading companies to shut down by Sunday. From Monday on, it has establishe­d a permanent legal enforcemen­t system together with other government­al department­s, in order to strike at any link in the ivory trade chain that dare illegally continue commercial ivory activities after the ban.

However, to root out the ivory trade, what’s needed are not only to legislatio­n and law enforcemen­t, but also more moves to remove the sick pursuit of ivory from people’s hearts.

According to a WWF survey in August, 50 percent of the respondent­s said they would like to buy ivory products, while 19 percent said they would continue buying even after the ban.

Worse, some illegal traders are eyeing other parts of elephants, including their meat, bones, and skin. Search “elephant skin wallets” on some domestic searching engines and you get thousands of shops selling them.

On Friday, the SFA and WWF jointly published a video starring former NBA All-Star and national political advisor Yao Ming, a long-time WildAid ambassador, who said that “Behind every ivory product you wear, there are numbers of elephants losing lives.”

Only when everyone gives up the sick, blind pursuit of ivory products, will the deadly trade totally disappear.

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