Conservation bid for money?
ASTORM was raised among conservation organisations worldwide when the Namibian government granted permission to a game farm owned by a Swedish national to capture and export to Dubai five young elephants.
In an open letter to Johan Hansen of the farm Eden Wildlife, the Humane Society International (HSI), co-signed by 35 other organisations, requested that he “immediately and permanently halt plans to capture and export five young live elephants… to Dubai Safari Park”.
Sources suggest that the Dubai Safari Park will offer elephants rides, which the society says may require cruel “taming” practices such as withholding of food and water as well as painful physical restraints.
The letter points out that the International Union for the Conservation of Nature’s African Elephant Specialist Group opposes the removal of African elephants from the wild for captive use because “there is no direct benefit for in situ conservation”.
It also notes that young elephants are dependent on their mothers and herds to acquire necessary socialisation skills, and that disruption of this bond is physically and psychologically traumatic for the calf and remaining herd.
Trading wild elephants for commercial purposes is also illegal in terms of Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species on Fauna and Flora (Cites) criteria. According to the Namibian Sun newspaper, the Ministry of Environment and Tourism dismissed allegations that the export did not meet these criteria.
Namibian environment minister Pohamba Shifeta insisted the sale was not for commercial purposes, but “purely for conservation as Namibia has seen an increase in its elephant population and in human-wildlife conflict”.
Pretence
He said the Namibian elephant population was increasing, the sale was purely for population management and that Cites requirements had been met.
Audrey Delsink, the executive director of HSI/Africa, said: “Ethically responsible elephant scientists know that capturing and selling elephant calves is not a humane or efficient population management measure. Rather, it is a false pretence to make financial gains.”
Earth Organisation Namibia has questioned the country’s assurances: “In a recent Cites report Namibia has given its official elephant numbers as 22 711, of which 13 136 live in the north-east of the country. It is impossible to verify those numbers because Namibia decided not to be part of the Great Elephant Census (GEC).”
There have also been concerns about Cites permitting. More than a decade ago the Cites secretariat decided to abolish checks on permits sent to its head office in Geneva.
This effectively means that Cites got out of the enforcement business and left it to individual countries to do their own policing.
Since then there have been ongoing reports of corruption and income from selling fake and falsified export permits for valuable species.
Since Namibia’s refusal to be part of the GEC and its attempt to remove trade restrictions at the recent Cites CoP17 meeting, there has been growing concern among conservationists in the country about sustainable wildlife management.
Namibian journalist John Grobler noted that “since 2014 poaching cases have been routinely delayed, repeat offenders routinely granted bail and police who were too efficient at rounding up poachers sidelined to dead-end desk jobs or pushed into early retirement.”
According to Earth Organisation Namibia: “We are dealing with a major poaching epidemic alongside completely unethical and illegal hunting practices, capture of wild species in the ocean and on land…”
It is not known whether the young elephants have been captured or already shipped to Dubai. The Ministry of Environment has not answered requests for information.
This article is from the Conservation Action Trust.