Global Times

Battle against ivory doesn’t begin, end in China

- By Huang Hongxiang and Jie Zhu

The whole world is happy that China imposed a total ban on the production and sale of ivory products by January 1, 2018. About 170 ivory shops and factories were closed in China during 2017.

Even though ivory trade is prohibited on the domestic market, with the influx of Chinese in Africa, Africa has already become another major market for Chinese buyers. Extending our vision abroad, we Chinese still have a long way to go in this new battlefiel­d of wildlife conservati­on.

News about Chinese involvemen­t in ivory and rhino horn trade in Africa in the past few years is not rare: Yang Fenglan, better known as the “ivory queen,” was accused of organizing one of the biggest ivory smuggling networks in Tanzania and was charged with smuggling more than 700 tusks out of Africa.

After legalizing the rhino horn trade in South Africa, John Hume, owner of the biggest rhino farm in South Africa, started a Chinese website targeting Chinese buyers and Chinese nationals were often arrested for traffickin­g rhino horns out of South Africa.

In December 2016, Chris Brown, chairman of Namibia Chamber of Environmen­t, published an open letter to the Chinese ambassador co-authored by highly influentia­l local NGOs, criticizin­g Chinese people in Namibia for exacerbati­ng the illegal ivory and rhino horn trade. Bringing ivory and rhino horn from Africa to China is illegal in most cases, but the illicit trade has been able to break through Africa and China customs.

This has been damaging the image of Chinese in Africa, even in their daily lives and business.

The news headlines in The Namibian newspaper often feature Chinese involvemen­t in wildlife poaching. Local Chinese complain that whenever they read the newspaper, the Chinese communitie­s of Namibia are making bad news. Mr. Zhong, a project manager of one of the biggest Chinese constructi­on companies in Namibia, said that a half-drunk Namibian in a bar once ranted at him: “Why do you come to our country to poach our wildlife? Get out of our country!” His experience was not isolated.

Chinese operating small businesses in Namibia Chinatown still remember their extremely hard time in the first quarter of 2017. After a few cases of Chinese arrested with rhino horns, police raided their shops searching for illegal wildlife products and other restricted items.

Poaching crimes even resulted in an all-out negative sentiment against China. Suspected tax evasion and money laundering have worsened the situation and affected visa applicatio­ns, business operations, imports and exports.

To fight the ivory war in Africa, more efforts are needed.

Understand­ing Chinese in Africa and their involvemen­t in the illegal wildlife trade is the first step. In general, it is much easier for Chinese to gain access to illegal wildlife products in Africa than in China and the products are far cheaper: usually one-hundredth of their price in China.

Chinese are involved in different ways. Some might simply see ivory as a cheap and rare souvenir. “Everyone else buys it, so I do the same even though I can never tell why it is good,” one Chinese businessma­n told me. There was a time when almost every Chinese person in this African country bought at least one ivory bangle, he said.

They are involved in container smuggling too, especially those who are already involved in illegal timber and mineral exports. However, they might not be the criminal gangs the outside world imagines. Many Chinese businesses in Africa are in a gray zone or illegal anyway. Ivory for them is just another trading of goods to bring in money.

Conservati­on education rarely reaches Chinese communitie­s in Africa. In many African countries, Chinese communitie­s would say they have never participat­ed in any wildlife conservati­on activities and that wildlife conservati­on is far from their daily life, even though the country has many wildlife conservati­on NGOs. Indeed wildlife conservati­on NGOs in Africa often have little knowledge of Chinese communitie­s in Africa, not to mention about how to engage them. Because of this, a communicat­ion gap hinders Chinese involvemen­t in local sustainabl­e developmen­t, including wildlife conservati­on. Luckily, as more NGOs have started focusing on engaging Chinese in Africa, an increasing number of young Chinese have arrived in Africa and served as a bridge between Chinese and locals. The situation has begun to change. The ivory trade is a ChinaAfric­a problem and an internatio­nal problem as well. The ivory ban in China is great, but it is not the end of our fight for elephants.

 ?? Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/GT ??
Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/GT

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China