Deccan Chronicle

S’pore crushes 9 tonnes of ivory haul on World Elephant Day eve

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Singapore, Aug 11: Singapore began destroying nine tonnes of seized ivory on Tuesday, the largest such action globally in recent years, including contraband tusks that came from more than 300 African elephants.

The destructio­n by an industrial rock crusher was held on the eve of World Elephant Day, and aims to prevent the items from re-entering the market and disrupt the global supply chain of illegally traded ivory, Singapore’s National Parks Board said.

A spokeswoma­n for the board said it would take three to five days for all of the ivory — seized between 2014 and 2019 — to be crushed, after which the fragments will be incinerate­d.

“This ivory crushing event, the largest globally in recent years, demonstrat­es Singapore’s strong determinat­ion and commitment to combat the illegal trade in wildlife,” the board said in a statement. The items include 8.8 tonnes of ivory seized last year in Singapore’s biggest haul worth Sg$17.6 million (US$13 million), it said.

Singapore also on Tuesday launched a Centre for Wildlife Forensics to “identify and analyse specimens involved in the illegal wildlife trade”.

By using DNA analysis and other methods to study the specimens, the centre can determine where the items were poached from — a useful tool in the fight against illegal wildlife trade.

Elephant ivory is coveted because it can be fashioned into items like combs, pendants and other exotic jewellery.

The global trade in elephant ivory, with rare exceptions, has been outlawed since 1989 after the population of the African animals dropped from millions in the mid-20th century to about 6,00,000 by the end of the 1980s. —

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