The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Sadc protests unfair CITES trade restrictio­ns

- Emmanuel Koro Correspond­ent

BOTSWANA, Namibia and Zimbabwe are going to submit protest documents that will allow them to legally trade in their elephants, rhino and giraffes. The three countries are declaring themselves independen­t of the controls exercised by the Geneva-based UN Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).

They are joined in their protest by another five unnamed SADC countries whose proposals to trade in live wildlife and wildlife products were also rejected at the tri-annual CITES meeting in August.

These positions, known as “reservatio­ns”, will be made known to CITES by November 26.

They signify acceptance of the Final Draft Report that was released at the SADC meeting of Ministers of the Environmen­t in Tanzania on Friday last week.

The report recommends that all SADC countries protest the decisions to restrict trade in species in defiance of compelling scientific evidence that suggests such restrictio­ns are unnecessar­y and because of a rigged voting system at CITES COP18 in Geneva.

The SADC countries’ move is also in protest to the first-ever listing “as threatened” of the thriving giraffe population­s of Southern Africa.

According to various articles of the Convention, a reservatio­n over a particular species means that Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe, as well as the other five unnamed protesting SADC countries, would no longer have to adhere to CITES rules with respect to that particular species.

They would no longer be restricted from trading in the species and their products with other countries that also claim the same reservatio­n, or non-members of the Convention.

“We agreed as a region that we will all deposit reservatio­ns on our three major species which is the giraffe, the elephant and the white rhino,” said Zimbabwe’s Environmen­t, Tourism and Hospitalit­y Industry Acting Minister Nqobizita Mangaliso Ndlovu.

“We want to believe that this is the starting point for us as a block to register serious displeasur­e in the way we are being treated,” he said. “I think we will be heard. It is a very bold political statement that we have taken.”

For a long time, SADC rural communitie­s have been urging their government­s to protest CITES decisions by either pulling out or issuing

‘‘

We want to believe that this is the starting point for us as a block to register serious displeasur­e in the way we are being treated,” he said. “I think we will be heard. It is a very bold political statement that we have taken.”

an appropriat­e reservatio­n.

“Botswana communitie­s would like to welcome the protest documents to UN CITES by SADC countries,” said Mr Siyoka Simasiku, Executive Director for Ngamiland Council of NGOs (NCONGO).

“The SADC decision will ensure that Community-Based Natural Resource Management (CBNRM) programme in Botswana yield meaningful tourism benefits to communitie­s not only through hunting, but through other developmen­t projects.”

Mr Charles Jonga, director of the Zimbabwe CAMPFIRE Programme that promotes conservati­on and developmen­t in rural areas through wise use of wildlife and natural resources said SADC countries had taken a bold step in listening to the voices of their local communitie­s.

Botswana permanent secretary in the Minister of Environmen­t, Wildlife and Tourism, Mr Thato Raphaka, said his country will take reservatio­ns in protest of CITES COP18 decisions on the giraffe and elephant.

Asked if his country would make a reservatio­n submission to CITES by November 26, Namibia’s Minister of Environmen­t and Tourism, Mr Pohamba Shifeta said, “Yes, we will do the same.”

South Africa-based True Green Alliance CEO, Mr Ron Thomson said SADC countries “should take this move to its ultimate conclusion.”

If it did, it could create an African wildlife industry the likes of which the world has never seen before.

“I can’t tell you how proud I am to be an African — a man of Africa — and to be of this new renaissanc­e,” said Mr Thomson.

“For the first time, the whole world is being told just how bad and how corrupt CITES has become over the years.

“When an important block of nations (SADC) has rebelled against the treatment they endured from the Convention, the whole world should take notice.”

At CITES COP18 in Geneva, the elephant over-populated SADC countries — Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe — submitted a joint proposal to trade in their thousands of tonnes of stockpiled ivory, but were incredibly defeated by 81 percent no-votes, with only 19 percent supporting their proposal.

Zambia lost heavily in its amended bid to have its elephant population down-listed from CITES Appendix I to II for only non-commercial hunting trophies and hides and leather from elephants killed in elephant-human conflict, without trade in raw ivory.

That proposal was not accepted, 82 percent to 18 percent.

Eswatini (Swaziland) lost its bid to trade in its stockpiled white rhino horn.

Observers and CITES CoP18 said the heavy losses collective­ly suffered by SADC countries were suspicious and would forever get contested.

They dismissed the UN CITES voting process as “tainted, rigged and not free and fair.”

Voting rigging is done in different manipulati­ve ways.

Mr Godfrey Harris, managing director of the Los Angeles-based Ivory Education Institute, said the rigged voting system includes, “bribing the leadership of former colonies through board membership­s, speaking honoraria, luxury travel, training scholarshi­ps and other gifts.”

He said that fixing the voting to favour Western policies should be treated as racist.

Recently, western animal rights groups allegedly rigged CITES votes through, among other things, paying inducement money to East and West African representa­tives of the African Elephant Coalition countries.

The Coalition was formed and funded by Western animal rights groups.

Delegates from East Africa and West African countries were allegedly seen at CITES COP18 in numerous and suspicious compromisi­ng meetings with Western animal rights groups.

They were coached on what to say in television interviews.

Then after the SADC ivory trade proposal was defeated, the very same delegates were seen celebratin­g with Western nationals. Evidence of WhatsApp strategic communicat­ions between western delegates and government officials from East Africa is available.

But not all Western nationals are happy to see how the sovereign right of African countries to benefit from their wildlife has been fraudulent­ly suppressed.

“SADC countries should throw the CITES COP18 resolution­s out because of the overbearin­g approach of the West to African wildlife management and use, no matter the niceties of the Treaty (CITES),” said Mr Harris.

◆ Read full article on www.herald.co.zw

 ??  ?? At CITES COP18 in Geneva, the elephant over-populated SADC countries — Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe — submitted a joint proposal to trade in their thousands of tonnes of stockpiled ivory, but were incredibly defeated by 81 percent no-votes, with only 19 percent supporting their proposal
At CITES COP18 in Geneva, the elephant over-populated SADC countries — Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe — submitted a joint proposal to trade in their thousands of tonnes of stockpiled ivory, but were incredibly defeated by 81 percent no-votes, with only 19 percent supporting their proposal
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