The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Dutch to ban raw ivory sales from 2019

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THE HAGUE: The Netherland­s said Monday it will ban all raw ivory sales from next year, as it unveiled the results of a major operation to combat traffickin­g in endangered animals and plants.

Currently, Dutch law permits the sale of raw ivory such as elephant tusks with an EU certificat­e, provided it entered the country between 1947 and 1990.

“From March 1 2019... the sale of raw ivory from and in The Netherland­s will no longer be possible,” Dutch Agricultur­e and Nature Affairs Minister Carola Schouten said.

“This measure comes because with raw ivory it’s very hard to tell the old from the new,” Schouten said in a letter to parliament.

The old rule came into force shortly after internatio­nal trade in ivory was banned in 1989 by CITES, the global conference that governs wildlife trade.

Ivory imported into the country before 1947 needed no such certificat­e, the NOS public broadcaste­r said.

“But recently acquired ivory is often ‘aged’, for instance by using tea leaves and sold on (Dutch online classified advertisin­g site) Marktplaat­s,” it added.

By banning all sales of raw ivory, “we are undercutti­ng illegal practices,” Schouten said. The minister also unveiled the results of a two-month operation by police, customs and food watchdog officials aimed at intercepti­ng endangered species brought into the country illegally.

‘Operation Toucan’ from September to November saw officials seize thousands of cacti from Panama and Peru without proper import papers as well as a range of exotic animals.

This included six boa constricto­rs, sent by mail from the United States, a pencilled marmoset and a capuchin monkey which were kept as pets and two dead toucans sent from Uruguay, the minister said.

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