The Arizona Republic

Water scarcity among issues dividing Africa on ivory trade

- CHRISTOPHE­R TORCHIA ASSOCIATED PRESS

JOHANNESBU­RG - Villagers and elephants are competing for scarce water in a remote part of Namibia, one of a minority of African nations that will push for the right to sell millions of dollars’ worth of ivory at an internatio­nal wildlife meeting that began Saturday.

“We at times have to go without water when the elephants are at the water points and wells the whole day,” villager Iningirua Musaso told the Namibia Press Agency this month.

Conflict between wildlife and some rural communitie­s, particular­ly during the worst drought in southern Africa in several decades, is often overshadow­ed by grim news about the continent-wide slaughter of elephants by poachers.

The number of Africa’s savannah elephants dropped by about 30 percent from 2007 to 2014, to 352,000, because of poaching, according to a recent study.

The southern African countries that want to sell their ivory stockpiles argue that it’s OK to profit from elephants so that their people see wildlife as a natural resource worth protecting.

African countries, however, are divided over how to conserve elephants. While Namibia, Zimbabwe and South Africa favor selling ivory stockpiles, they are opposed by about 30 nations that want to tighten an internatio­nal ban on the ivory trade.

The world’s main ivory consumer, China, plans to close its domestic market. The United States has announced a near-total ban on the domestic sale of African elephant ivory.

Namibia has said it does not expect the discussion­s at the meeting of the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, or CITES, to go in its favor.

South Africa supports Namibian and Zimbabwean proposals for internatio­nal ivory sales, said Edna Molewa, the country’s environmen­t minister. Southern African countries with robust elephant population­s should not be treated the same way as other nations hit hard by elephant poaching, she told reporters.

South Africa has about 27,000 elephants; Zimbabwe has 82,000; and Namibia has 20,000 or more. The countries say they can make millions of dollars by selling ivory stockpiles.

Some 3,500 delegates are expected to attend the meeting of the CITES group, which has 183 member countries and aims to ensure that internatio­nal trade in wild animals and plants does not threaten their survival.

CITES allowed a one-off sale of elephant ivory that was completed in 2009. In that sale, ivory from Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe went to China and Japan. The sale of 102 tons of ivory raised $15.4 million for elephant conservati­on, according to CITES.

Frank Pope, operations manager at Save the Elephants, a Kenya-based group, said elephant population­s will suffer if African countries don’t unite to oppose the ivory trade.

 ??  ??
 ?? TSVANGIRAY­I MUKWAZHI/AP ?? A Zimbabwean park official shows an elephant tusk. Namibia, Zimbabwe and South Africa favor selling ivory stockpiles, but about 30 countries want to tighten an internatio­nal ban.
TSVANGIRAY­I MUKWAZHI/AP A Zimbabwean park official shows an elephant tusk. Namibia, Zimbabwe and South Africa favor selling ivory stockpiles, but about 30 countries want to tighten an internatio­nal ban.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States