Mmegi

Rays of hope emerge for Botswana at CITES

- MBONGENI MGUNI

The secretaria­t of the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) has recommende­d that member states reject a proposal to ban elephant trophy hunting in Botswana and its neighbours, a blow to a Western African bloc that is pushing the idea. Staff Writer,

reports

Rays of hope for Botswana and its elephant range neighbours have emerged ahead of the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) Conference of Parties (CoP) meeting in Panama, where several West African countries are pushing for a ban on the country’s elephant trophy trade.

CITES is an internatio­nal body binding 183 states to agreements on the trade and protection of endangered plants and animals.

The upcoming CoP19, to be held in Panama in November, is CITES’ highest decision-making meeting held every three years where countries frequently clash over proposals to tighten or loosen trade in various animals and plants.

The four West African states and Syria want CITES to upgrade elephants in Botswana, Namibia, South Africa, and Zimbabwe from Appendix II to Appendix I, the highest level category for endangered species which would prohibit internatio­nal trade for commercial purposes.

The proposal would slash incomes from the trophy hunting industry in the country, where elephant quotas are the hunting season’s drawcard, eroding the revenues operators and communitie­s earn each year. The Department of Wildlife and National Parks (DWNP) estimates that communitie­s earned P30 million from this year’s hunting season, allowing the different trusts to push these revenues into various empowermen­t ventures that help the incomes of those living with species such as elephants.

This week, the CITES secretaria­t released its final recommenda­tions on the 52 proposals member states will be debating in Panama when the CoP starts on November 14, indicating that the arguments provided by Burkina Faso, Equatorial Guinea, Mali and Senegal did not hold water.

“The informatio­n provided in the supporting statement does not indicate that any of the four Loxodonta africana (African bush elephant) population­s that are the subject of this proposal underwent marked declines in their population­s in the wild,” the secretaria­t noted.

“The population­s of Loxodonta africana of Botswana, Namibia, South Africa, and Zimbabwe are not small, and the area of distributi­on of the species in the four range states is not restricted and their population­s have not undergone a marked decline.

“The secretaria­t recommends that the proposal be rejected.” At the last CITES CoP in 2019, the four West African states unsuccessf­ully lobbied for the same proposal, this time as part of a larger group which also included Nigeria, Niger, Cote d’Ivoire, Gabon, and Sudan. The West African states’ persistenc­e has raised speculatio­n about the bloc’s motives.

At present, CITES observes a split-listing for African elephants which recognises that the smaller forest elephant in West Africa is endangered due to years of unrestrain­ed poaching, while population­s of the bush or savanna elephant in the south are thriving, especially in Botswana and Zimbabwe.

The persistenc­e of the West African bloc has also given rise to the often-repeated allegation­s of expensive flights, fancy dinners, gifts, and bribes paid by influentia­l NGOs to African delegates in exchange for support against ivory trade proposals. Lobbying for and against the various proposals ahead of the Panama showdown has also reached fever pitch.

Analysts told Mmegi that while the secretaria­t may provide its recommenda­tions, decisions ultimately rest with the delegates who cast their votes and come under the influence of the various lobbyists who hold divergent views on the proposals. CITES proposals typically require two-thirds majorities to pass and certain regions such as the European Union vote as a bloc, in this case representi­ng 26 influentia­l votes.

DWNP director, Kabelo Senyatso told Mmegi there was a reason the West African nations kept going after the elephants in Southern Africa.

“It’s because they are emboldened by the support that they get particular­ly from the Western NGOs,” he told Mmegi on the sidelines of a recent workshop to finalise the country’s position for Panama. “It’s in the interest of the Western NGOs because for them they use these events to fundraise and so there’s quite a number of them and you can check in various scientific publicatio­ns to appreciate how much is mobilised by these NGOs and how much is invested in Africa vis-à-vis in marketing, PR, and all else that they are doing.”

Senyatso added: “It’s in their interests really for those NGOs to ensure that they mobilise their constituen­ts. “It’s not so much about the African government­s but it’s actually about the constituen­ts of these NGOs in Europe and the US because they are providing the funding and in turn, these NGOs then sponsor these proposals for some of our fellow Africans, which is regrettabl­e but it is how things are.” Botswana and the region, however, have also attempted to push back against the anti-hunting lobbyists.

Ahead of the Geneva CoP in 2019, President Mokgweetsi Masisi lobbied both Angola and Kenya to not oppose Southern Africa’s proposals for a once-off sale of ivory stocks.

The effort was ultimately unsuccessf­ul. This time around, the country has focused its canvassing around influentia­l voting blocs, ‘friendly forces’ and specific proposals.

Besides fighting off the West African onslaught, Botswana and its neighbours are again pushing for a once-off ivory sale of government-owned ivory stockpiles with the restrictio­n that the funds are used for conservati­on initiative­s.

The last such sale took place in 2008 and before that, another sale was permitted in 1999. In its recommenda­tions this week, the CITES secretaria­t has partly accepted the proposal but rejected certain clauses sought by the region.

The once-ivory stockpile sale has been repeatedly rejected in previous CoPs and is among the decisions dealing the most frustratio­ns to the regional elephant range states who argue that the cost of maintainin­g the ivory stockpiles up to CITES’ safety standards is prohibitiv­e, while the revenues could help conservati­on.

“It’s important that we be allowed to do so because maintainin­g the stockpile takes away resources from other opportunit­ies that Botswana could be exploiting,” Senyatso said.

One ray of hope for the region is a proposal by Zimbabwe that CITES should change its processes so that countries that feel the weight of conserving certain species should have a greater weight attached to their votes, than countries that do not. In essence, the one-country/one-vote system should be reconstitu­ted so that countries dealing with any particular species have a greater voice in the voting around that species. “We met as Southern Africa to discuss CITES and our ministers challenged us to say why is that countries that don’t have elephants are dictating to us how we should be managing these,” the DWNP director told Mmegi.

“We put together a proposal to say CITES should reflect on its procedures to perhaps amend and that one is not about elephants, but a general principle.

“This is to say that perhaps it should be amended to say that countries that support a large proportion of the species are allowed more weight or their vote should carry more weight than those that don’t. “For instance, we are landlocked and don’t have sharks.

Really if there’s a proposal on sharks, why should Botswana be very vocal and perhaps to the detriment of a country that has sharks? “It’s the same principle to say CITES should reform its processes to allow countries that hold particular species to be the ones that are allowed to have a greater say.”

Former DWNP director, Cyril Taolo said the region did not ‘realistica­lly’ expect the proposal to pass, but it was a question of testing the waters and raising the issue to ensure that debate begins.

“When proposals are put forward, often the ones who are making all the efforts to conserve the species find themselves struggling to put their arguments across because those who are more vocal come with the support of the anti-trade and the votes go against any proposal put forward,” he told the recent CITES preparatio­n meeting.

Analysts expect that proposals to change the process will be roundly rejected, as powerful voting alliances will argue that any changes to the vote-weighting system would interfere with the science that is supposed to lead all decisions at CITES. Countries with superior scientific evidence may find their contributi­ons limited because they do not necessaril­y have the species being debated.

Between the secretaria­t’s recommenda­tions, the seedy dealings on the sidelines of the meeting, and the battle for influence in Panama, Botswana, and its neighbours have a mountain to climb.

 ?? PIC: MBONGENI MGUNI ?? In the news: The conservati­on of elephants is a highly divisive issue
PIC: MBONGENI MGUNI In the news: The conservati­on of elephants is a highly divisive issue

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