Cape Times

Namibia, Zim bid to export ivory fails

- Ed Stoddard

NAMIBIA and Zimbabwe failed yesterday to convince a UN body that they should be allowed to export ivory – something they had argued would protect rather than further endanger Africa’s elephants.

Member countries of the UN’s Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species (Cites) voted overwhelmi­ngly to reject the proposals to sell tusks seized from poachers and taken from animals that had died naturally or been put down by the state.

“African elephants are in steep decline across much of the continent due to poaching for their ivory, and opening up any legal trade in ivory would complicate efforts to conserve them,” said Ginette Hemley, the head of the Cites delegation for conservati­on group World Wide Fund.

“It could offer criminal syndicates new avenues to launder poached ivory, underminin­g law enforcemen­t.”

A global ban on ivory sales was imposed in 1989 to stem a wave of poaching, but Cites allowed Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe to sell stockpiles to Japan in 1999. They were joined by South Africa in 2008 in a sale to China and Japan.

Namibia and cash-strapped Zimbabwe had both argued that the sales were needed to raise money for conservati­on and that their population­s had been stable or growing, triggering conflict with poor rural farmers.

Zimbabwe said it had a 70 ton ivory stockpile worth $35 million (R479m). Other nations, such as Kenya, are strongly opposed to any reopening of the ivory trade, saying it will stimulate demand and threaten its own elephants.

In the secret ballots, Namibia’s proposal lost 73 to 27, Zimbabwe’s 80 to 21, both far short of the two-thirds required to pass.

“Ivory belongs to the elephants and ivory is worth more on a live animal rather than a dead animal,” Kenya’s Environmen­t Minister, Judi Wakhungu, said.

Kenya, which also bans sports hunting, has for decades focused on wildlife-watching safaris and ecotourism as the main revenue streams from its big animals. In April, it burnt 105 tons of ivory from 8 000 animals.

Tens of thousands of elephants have been poached in Africa in the past decade to meet demand for ivory in newly affluent Asian economies, where it is prized for carvings and other decorative purposes.

Cites recommende­d on Sunday that countries with legal domestic ivory markets, which are not regulated by the convention as its remit is crossborde­r trade, start closing them down because they are seen as contributi­ng to poaching.

Elephant population­s have drasticall­y declined in east and central Africa, with Tanzania estimated to have lost about 60 percent of its population of the animals in the past decade. But a number of southern African states – with notable exceptions such as Mozambique – have stable to growing elephant numbers.

Swaziland has tabled a proposal to sell rhino horn, but it is also unlikely to get the green light. – Reuters

 ?? FILE PHOTO: REUTERS ?? A Kenya Wildlife Service ranger stacks elephant tusks, part of an estimated 105 tons of confiscate­d ivory to be set ablaze, on a pyre at Nairobi National Park in April. Kenya has strongly opposed any reopening of the ivory trade.
FILE PHOTO: REUTERS A Kenya Wildlife Service ranger stacks elephant tusks, part of an estimated 105 tons of confiscate­d ivory to be set ablaze, on a pyre at Nairobi National Park in April. Kenya has strongly opposed any reopening of the ivory trade.

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