Global Times

Ivory tears

Japan’s ivory market caters unabated to Chinese clients due to absence of regulation­s

- By Zhang Hui

China has officially banned the sale and trade of all ivory products, receiving praise from animal rights activists around the world

However, ivory markets continue to thrive in neighborin­g Japan, with Chinese visitors making up a majority of their customer base

Chinese internet giants have formed an unpreceden­ted alliance to crack down on illegal online trading of ivory, but Japanese and Chinese e-retailers remain active

As animal rights activists around the world applaud China’s announceme­nt this past weekend that it would officially ban all ivory products from being sold in the country, another disturbing trend – ivory illegally exported into China from Japan – has raised concerns about the continued demand for this rare product.

A report released in December, 2017 by wildlife conservati­on organizati­on TRAFFIC revealed that Japan’s absence of any effective regulation­s against ivory has allowed ivory products to be routinely purchased by Chinese visitors and agents, most whom use the opportunit­y to illegally export the goods for later resale in China.

Between 2011 and 2016, the export of ivory out of Japan resulted in at least 2.42 tons of illegal ivory being seized by Chinese customs, while seized Japanese ivory commoditie­s into China during that same time represente­d 95 percent of all illegal exports by weight, according to the report.

“If this situation continues, it will undermine the enforcemen­t of China’s new ivory ban,” Zhou Fei, head of TRAFFIC’s China Office and the Wildlife Trade Programme of the WWF China, told the Global Times.

In China, an illegal ivory products retailer contacted by the Global Times via Chinese social media claimed Japan as the origin of his raw ivory. Despite the new ban prohibitin­g all commercial ivory processing and trade in China, which took effect Sunday, this retailer openly and brazenly advertised his ivory products on social media with seemingly little concern.

While urging Japan to follow suit to shut down its domestic ivory products market, animal welfare activists believe that only a combined effort from all nations, both developed and undevelope­d, will effectivel­y reduce elephant poaching, which claims the lives of at least 30,000 elephants every year.

Japanese markets

TRAFFIC’s researcher­s conducted covert interviews with ivory vendors in antiques outlets and tourist areas in the Japanese cities of Tokyo, Osaka, and Kyoto between May and September of 2017.

Many vendors interviewe­d said that the Chinese are their primary customers and that they are often agents with the intention of procuring ivory products for clients back in the Chinese mainland, according to the report “Ivory Towers: An Assessment of Japan’s Ivory Trade and Domestic Market.”

In describing those Chinese buyers, the Japanese vendors said that they use cellphones to communicat­e with clients back in China before negotiatin­g a price. Oftentimes the Chinese agents will simply buy up every ivory product in the store.

One Chinese college student surnamed Chen, who has lived in Japan for the past five years, told the Global Times that ivory products, including seals, chopsticks and necklaces, can easily be bought in any Japanese shop selling such products.

Zhou said that there is evidence that the Japanese market contribute­s to ivory smuggling to China, and the survey found that 73 percent of Japanese vendors interviewe­d encouraged illegal ivory exports by suggesting methods to hide smaller ivory items in one’s luggage.

One Japanese antiques dealer told TRAFFIC that ivory can be easily smuggled into the Chinese mainland via the Hong Kong border or Shanghai, where customs inspection­s and law enforcemen­t are supposedly more lax.

Previous cases dealt with by Chinese authoritie­s revealed that criminal syndicates operating between Japan and China are heavily involved in the illegal ivory trade.

The largest seizure of ivory was made in China in 2015, when Beijing Forest Police caught 16 suspects traffickin­g over 800 kilograms of raw ivory from Japan via Hong Kong and Shenzhen, the Beijing News reported.

Based on media reports of illegal ivory traffickin­g cases from Japan into China over the past five years, the Global Times found that most ivory products were smuggled via sea or postal parcels.

In one recent case, the Guangzhou Entry-Exit Inspection and Quarantine Bureau in South China’s Guangdong Province intercepte­d 5 kilograms of raw ivory in a postal package sent from Japan, Nanfang Daily reported on December 24.

“Japan’s domestic ivory market shrunk after the emperor’s appeal on demand reduction a decade ago, but the market turned active again in recent years due to a growing demand from China,” Zhou said.

According to Zhou, Japanese consumers prefer ivory seals, chopsticks and accessorie­s for their kimono (traditiona­l Japanese garment used for ceremonies). But Japan’s ivory market in recent years has also been selling an increasing number of ivory bracelets, necklaces and Buddha or Guan Yin pendants, which are popular in the Chinese market, not the Japanese domestic market.

According to a separate survey conducted by WWF and TRAFFIC in 2017, 19 percent of 2,000 respondent­s in China said that they “still plan to purchase ivory products” after the ban takes effect.

Rampant e-business

A simple search for ivory products on Yahoo Japan’s shopping page generated over 58,300 results Tuesday, with most being ivory seals or carved works featuring Buddhism symbols.

Those products were priced between

“To crack down on elephant poaching requires global collaborat­ion. Chinese tourists may continue to buy ivory products in Japan and other countries if those countries fail to shut down their ivory markets.” Zhou Fei head of TRAFFIC’s China Office and the Wildlife Trade Programme of the WWF China

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