Texarkana Gazette

Two tons of ivory crushed to protest illegal trade

- By Mary Esch and Joseph B. Frederick

NEW YORK—Trinkets, statues and jewelry crafted from the tusks of at least 100 slaughtere­d elephants were fed Thursday into a rock crusher in Central Park to demonstrat­e the state’s commitment to smashing the illegal ivory trade.

The artifacts placed ceremoniou­sly onto a conveyor belt to be ground into dust included piles of golf-ball-sized Japanese sculptures, called netsuke, intricatel­y carved into monkeys, rabbits and other fanciful designs. Many of the items were beautiful. Some were extremely valuable.

But state environmen­tal officials and Wildlife Conservati­on Society members, who partnered with Tiffany & Co. for the “Ivory Crush” of nearly 2 tons of ivory, said no price justifies slaughteri­ng elephants for their tusks.

“By crushing a ton of ivory in the middle of the world’s most famous public park, New Yorkers are sending a message to poachers, trafficker­s and dealers who try to set up shop right here on our streets,” said John Calvelli, the Society’s executive vice president and director of the 96 Elephants Campaign. “We won’t stand for the slaughter of elephants. Nobody needs an ivory brooch that badly.”

The sale of ivory across internatio­nal boundaries has been banned since 1990, but the U.S. and many other countries have allowed people to buy and sell ivory domestical­ly, subject to certain regulation­s that gave smugglers loopholes. Last year, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service instituted a near-total ban on the domestic commercial ivory trade and barred sales across state lines.

Since August 2014, New York law has prohibited the sale, purchase, trade or distributi­on of anything made from elephant or mammoth ivory or rhinoceros horn, except in limited situations with state approval. Enforcemen­t efforts have focused on New York City, the nation’s largest port of entry for illegal wildlife goods, state officials said.

The ivory pieces sent to the crusher included more than $4.5 million worth seized by undercover investigat­ors from Metropolit­an Fine Arts & Antiques in New York City in 2015. In pleading guilty last week to illegally selling ivory, the store’s owners agreed to donate $100,000 each to the World Wildlife Fund and Wild Tomorrow Fund for their endangered species protection projects.

Also headed for the crusher was a netsuke, depicting three men with a fish, worth an estimated $14,000, and a pair of elaboratel­y carved ivory towers worth $850,000.

More than 270 tons of ivory have been destroyed by government­s and conservati­on groups in high-profile public events in 22 countries, according to the Wildlife Conservati­on Society.

Some critics have argued that destroying ivory could drive up black market prices by increasing scarcity, thus encouragin­g more poaching. Others argue that it’s wasteful and that it would be better to sell confiscate­d ivory to pay for conservati­on efforts in poor African countries.

Wendy Hapgood, founder of Wild Tomorrow Fund, said crushing events send a signal that laws banning the ivory trade will be strictly enforced.

“It’s a way to tell the world that ivory shouldn’t be coveted, it should be destroyed. It belongs only on an elephant,” she said.

“We won’t stand for the slaughter of elephants. Nobody needs an ivory brooch that badly.”

 ?? AP Photo/Mary Altaffer ?? A New York State Environmen­tal Conservati­on officer salutes as an ivory sculpture rolls up a conveyor belt into a crusher Thursday at Central Park. The New York State Department of Environmen­tal Conservati­on destroyed illegal ivory confiscate­d through...
AP Photo/Mary Altaffer A New York State Environmen­tal Conservati­on officer salutes as an ivory sculpture rolls up a conveyor belt into a crusher Thursday at Central Park. The New York State Department of Environmen­tal Conservati­on destroyed illegal ivory confiscate­d through...

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