USA TODAY International Edition

Elephants trumpet support for ivory ban

- James A. Baker III James A. Baker III was the 61st U. S. secretary of State.

If elephants could trumpet for joy, there would have been a resounding crescendo Dec. 30 when China announced that it will close its domestic commercial ivory market this year.

In 2015, Presidents Xi Jinping and Obama stood together and announced their intention to close their respective ivory markets. America implemente­d a near total ban last June.

Trade between countries is already prohibited, and now China’s decision to cease domestic commercial ivory sales adds much needed teeth to that ban. Additional­ly, law enforcemen­t efforts to stop the illegal trade will be enhanced along with public education on the ecological damage of purchasing ivory.

Conservati­onists have called the Chinese ban a game changer, with ivory trafficker­s now staring at a giant “out of business” sign by their largest customer.

The Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature has voted to urge all government­s to close their domestic ivory markets. The Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora ( CITES) has adopted a resolution recommendi­ng the same.

The seeds of this global movement began 28 years ago when, as secretary of State under President George H. W. Bush, I was proud to have been part of American leadership in an effort to ban the internatio­nal ivory trade through CITES. Elephant numbers, which had been declining steadily due to poaching, began to stabilize. Over time, however, the ban was weakened and undermined through approval of oneoff sales of ivory stockpiles, as well as the developmen­t of a thriving black market trade.

Coupled with growing wealth in China and the increased demand for luxury goods such as ivory, trafficker­s and organized crime networks began wholesale slaughteri­ng of elephants.

According to the Wildlife Conservati­on Society, this has resulted in as many as 35,000 elephants killed annually — or 96 a day. A recent census puts the number of African elephants at 400,000, down from 1.2 million three decades ago. It’s estimated that forest elephants, which are restricted to the Congo Basin in Central Africa, will need 100 years to recover from an onslaught of poaching that began in 2002.

As China moves to implement its market closure, we need to ensure that bans are policed effectivel­y. Further, more resources are needed to stop the killings and put the trafficker­s out of business. Other countries with legal domestic ivory markets should follow China’s lead and close their markets, particular­ly Japan and other Asian countries where demand for ivory is high.

It would be a crime if future generation­s had to live in a world without elephants.

I applaud China and encourage it to strongly enforce its ban. And I urge the Trump administra­tion to restore the bipartisan efforts and American leadership that will help elephant population­s begin the long road to recovery.

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