The Borneo Post

Tales of murder and suffering in HK ivory ban debate

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HONG KONG: A Kenyan park ranger who said his closest friend was shot dead while protecting elephants urged Hong Kong not to compensate the city’s ivory traders in an emotive speech to lawmakers yesterday.

Hong Kong is a major hub for ivory sales and last year, announced that it would introduce a total ban on the trade.

But authoritie­s later clarified they would only completely abolish the trade by 2021, drawing criticism they were dragging their feet and trailing China, where officials last year pledged to halt the enterprise by the end of 2017.

Angry ivory traders in Hong Kong say they will be forced to close down their businesses and are demanding the government compensate them for their stock, a move opponents say would fuel the illicit business and encourage stockpilin­g.

Despite the planned ban, the trade is still flourishin­g in Hong Kong, which saw its biggest ivory bust in three decades in July, when more than seven tonnes of tusks worth over US$ 9 million were seized.

During a public debate at the city’s legislatur­e over the ivory ban bill, ranger Chris Leadismo, the head of wildlife security at NGO Save the Elephants in northern Kenya, said he and his colleagues put their lives on the line to protect elephants.

“I still recall the death of my very closest friend Joseph, who was shot dead while in the line of duty in June this year. There is still pain in my heart,” Leadismo said, wearing his camouflage ranger uniform.

Leadismo later changed into the brightly coloured robes of the Samburu people, a tribe to which he belongs, to speak to reporters and said the pace of the city’s ivory ban was “too slow”.

The next debate on the bill is scheduled for October.

The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) says more than 20,000 African elephants die every year to feed the ivory trade in Hong Kong and Asia.

WWF wildlife law enforcemen­t officer Crispian Barlow told the hearing that the violence around the trade was escalating.

“I had a ranger who was drowned, another was set on fire while he was asleep,” he said.

A range of figures against the trade flew in for the hearing, including American photograph­er and filmmaker Kate Brooks who released documentar­y ‘ The Last Animals’ earlier this year which looked at conservati­onists battling poachers and traffickin­g.

“Can anybody in this room really look a child in the eyes and say that a piece of ivory is more valuable than their father’s life?” Brooks asked the hearing.

However, traders hit back, saying they had been forced to sell off their remaining stock for the past 27 years, following an internatio­nal ban in 1989.

The ban came after African elephant population­s dropped from millions in the mid-20th century to some 600,000 by the end of the 1980s.

If the bill is passed, they would have to dispose of their stock by 2021.

“We are the victims... We have put all our capital into this industry,” ivory seller Chu Chunpong told the hearing.

But Leadismo said compensati­on would only fuel the business.

“As they are compensate­d, more elephants will die to fuel this trade, and I will lose more comrades, or even my life as a wildlife ranger,” he said. — AFP ISTANBUL: Turkish police shot dead a would-be suicide bomber who was set to attack a police station and intelligen­ce base in the Mediterran­ean city of Mersin yesterday, security sources said.

The sources said the targeted police station, in the city’s Yenisehir district, was next to the regional headquarte­rs of Turkey’s MIT national intelligen­ce agency.

Mersin state prosecutor Mustafa Ercan told the state-run Anadolu news agency that the authoritie­s were working on the assumption that the assailant was an Islamic State militant.

The incident occurred at 9.30am when police began trailing a man in his 30s behaving suspicious­ly and opened fire as he refused to stop when ordered to do so, 30 metres from the police station, Dogan news agency said.

Bomb disposal experts were working to defuse an apparent explosive device found on the man, it said.

Islamic State militants have previously carried out gun and bomb attacks in Turkey. Many foreign fighters have also passed through Turkey in recent years on their way to join the jihadist group in its self-proclaimed caliphate in Syria and Iraq.

Ankara has detained more than 5,000 Islamic State suspects and deported some 3,290 foreign militants from 95 different countries in recent years, according to Turkish officials. — Reuters

I still recall the death of my very closest friend Joseph, who was shot dead while in the line of duty in June this year. There is still pain in my heart. Chris Leadismo, head of wildlife security NGO Save the Elephants

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 ??  ?? Park ranger Chris Leadismo, the head of wildlife security at NGO Save the Elephants in northern Kenya, holds up a photo (left) taken the day before showing acitivists holding letters which read ‘Support HK Ivory Ban!’ and photos of an elephant before (top) and after it was killed for its tusks, after a public hearing at the Legislativ­e Council (Legco) on a government proposal to ban the sale of ivory in Hong Kong. — AFP photo
Park ranger Chris Leadismo, the head of wildlife security at NGO Save the Elephants in northern Kenya, holds up a photo (left) taken the day before showing acitivists holding letters which read ‘Support HK Ivory Ban!’ and photos of an elephant before (top) and after it was killed for its tusks, after a public hearing at the Legislativ­e Council (Legco) on a government proposal to ban the sale of ivory in Hong Kong. — AFP photo

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