The Independent on Saturday

China to ban domestic ivory trade by end of 2017

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CHINA will slap a total ban on the domestic ivory trade within a year, the government announced yesterday, shutting the door to the world’s biggest end-market for poached ivory.

The State Council said in a notice a complete ban would be enforced by December 31, 2017. A first batch of factories and shops will need to close and hand in their licences by March 31, 2017.

Conservati­on groups applauded the ban, with WildAid’s wildlife campaigner Alex Hofford calling it “the biggest and best conservati­on news of 2016”.

Environmen­talists say poached ivory can be disguised as legal as long as trade is allowed in licensed outlets on the high street and online.

Poaching is a major factor contributi­ng to the rapid decline in the numbers of African elephants, with about 20 000 slaughtere­d every year, according to the WWF.

It says about 415 000 African elephants remain today, compared with the 3 to 5 million in the early 20th century. They are listed as a vulnerable species.

People with ivory products previously obtained through legal means can apply for certificat­ion and continue to display them in exhibition­s and museums, the government announceme­nt said.

The auction of legally-obtained ivory antiques, under “strict supervisio­n”, will also be allowed after obtaining authorisat­ion. The government will also crack down on law enforcemen­t and boost education, it added.

WWF Hong Kong’s senior wildlife crime officer Cheryl Lo said the bold timeline “shows determinat­ion to help save Africa’s elephants from extinction. A ban clearly requires strong enforcemen­t and support from the government to be most effective. But together with China’s announceme­nt, now that three of the world’s largest domestic ivory markets, that is China, Hong Kong and the US, (they) are being phased out.”

The US enacted a near-total ban on commercial trade in ivory from African elephants in June.

Campaigner­s are urging the Hong Kong government to speed up its plan of phasing out the local ivory trade by the end of 2021.

The former British colony, now Chinese-ruled but governed by different laws under a “one country, two systems” arrangemen­t, allows trade of “pre-convention ivory”, or ivory products acquired before 1975.

The financial centre also remains an important transit and consumptio­n hub for illegal ivory to China and the rest of Asia.

Chinese ivory traders have tried to pre-empt the move, WildAid’s Hofford said, with some carvers setting up shops in Laos and Myanmar and other traders moving their products “offshore” to places such as Hong Kong. – Reuters

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