Fiji Sun

A President’s Passion for Wildlife, Biodiversi­ty

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The runaway success story of the summer was the more than 110-day adventure of a herd of 14 wandering wild Asian elephants across Yunnan Province, southwest China.

The herd’s sojourn gripped the nation and beyond, making the elephants social media superstars. Beyond the headlines, however, this is a story of conservati­on, commitment, and care that spans decades.

In December 2015, during a state visit to Zimbabwe, Chinese President Xi Jinping reflected on the remarkable progress by China to protect wildlife, natural habitats and end the illegal trade of wild animals and animal products, including ivory.

The remarks were not made on a whim. Mr Xi didn’t just tell people to protect the environmen­t and local wildlife; he led by example.

In 1997, when Mr Xi was a local official in Fujian, he was inspecting a river that runs through one of the province’s counties when a carp leaped out of the water onto his raft.

“Now we have an additional ingredient for tonight’s dinner,” rafter Xiao Kewen joked.

Mr Xi, however, smiled and removed one of the covers on his boots, filled it with water, and placed the fish inside. When the raft arrived in calmer water, he released it back into the river.

Almost twenty years later in December 2016, China declared that the country would end the domestic ivory trade within a year.

True to its word, on January 1, 2018, a nationwide ban on the ivory trade for commercial purposes came into force. In November 2020, when addressing the G20 Riyadh Summit via video link, Mr Xi took this initiative another step forward and called for a complete ban on the illegal wildlife trade.

Earlier this year, giant pandas were downgraded from “endangered” to “vulnerable.”

The Tibetan antelope went from “endangered” to “near threatened.”

During this year’s epic elephant expedition, hundreds of thousands of locals were evacuated, but they showed great patience and tolerance.

China’s conservati­on, commitment, and care for wildlife and the environmen­t represent just one way it aims to ensure our shared home is welcoming and comfortabl­e for generation­s to come.

 ?? Photo: Xinhua ?? Chinese President Xi Jinping and his wife Peng Liyuan during a visit to a wildlife sanctuary in Harare, Zimbabwe, on December 2, 2015.
Photo: Xinhua Chinese President Xi Jinping and his wife Peng Liyuan during a visit to a wildlife sanctuary in Harare, Zimbabwe, on December 2, 2015.
 ?? Photo: Xinhua ?? Chinese President Xi Jinping (centre, front) during a visit to the wildlife sanctuary in Harare, Zimbabwe.
Photo: Xinhua Chinese President Xi Jinping (centre, front) during a visit to the wildlife sanctuary in Harare, Zimbabwe.

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