The Borneo Post

Britain announces plan for near-total ban on antique ivory trade

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LONDON: Britain yesterday outlined plans for a near-total ban on trade in antique ivory, bowing to pressure from campaigner­s who say that poachers are exploiting loopholes in the current regulation­s.

Announcing the plan, Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove said the decline in elephant population­s fuelled by poaching for their tusks ‘ shames our generation’.

“Ivory should never be seen as a commodity for financial gain or a status symbol — so we want to ban its sale,” Gove said in a statement.

“These plans will put the UK front and centre of global efforts to end the insidious trade in ivory.”

Britain currently bans sales of raw ivory but allows trade in carved items produced before 1947, and campaigner­s warn that this legal market has been used as a cover for trade in illegal ivory.

Under the new proposals, to be debated over the next three months before legislatio­n is introduced, sales of older items would be banned, with some exemptions including musical instrument­s and items deemed to have ‘significan­t historic, artistic or cultural value’.

The US- based Wildlife Conservati­on Society said it was ‘a critical step in joining other nations to reverse the precipitou­s decline of African elephants’.

“The implementa­tion of a strict ban without loopholes that traders can exploit is essential in the fight against the poaching of elephants and the traffickin­g in their ivory,” the group added.

But World Wildlife Fund (WWF) chief executive Tanya Steeler warned there was a long way to go and ‘no time to waste’.

“Whilst discussion­s roll on, 55 African elephants a day are killed. We need to be the generation that ends the illegal ivory trade once and for all.

“This is about a lot more than banning ivory sales in one country. It means working with global leaders and communitie­s around the world, particular­ly in China and south- east Asia, to implement bans,” she said.

The United States — the world’s second-largest consumer market for illegal ivory after China — has announced a near-total ban on the trade of African elephant ivory with the exception of antiques.

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