Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

NAMIBIA’S WILD ELEPHANTS ARE BEING ROUNDED UP FOR INTERNATIO­NAL SALE

- BY DINA FINE MARON National Geographic

Namibia is in the process of capturing 57 wild elephants sold last year at auction, according to a statement today from the country’s Ministry of Environmen­t, Forestry and

Tourism.

To the consternat­ion of environmen­tal groups and elephant advocates, Namibia had announced in December 2020 that it would auction off 170 of its elephants to reduce population­s that were increasing­ly clashing with humans. It says it has an estimated 24,000 elephants.

Last August, the ministry published its first—and until today, only—public informatio­n on the matter. It said 57 elephants, which it had yet to round up from the wild, had been “successful­ly sold” to three bidders. Fifteen would remain in Namibia and 42 would be exported.

Thirty-seven elephants have already been captured, today’s statement says, including 22 for export. It said nothing about where the elephants will go, other than that it won’t be China.

The government of Namibia “can’t give [destinatio­n] details at this stage until the entire process is completed,” says Ministry of Environmen­t, Forestry and Tourism spokespers­on Romeo Muyunda. “This is a clause in the sales agreement that we signed with the bidders.”

Selling wild elephants into captivity has long been controvers­ial, both because there’s debate about whether such highly mobile, intelligen­t animals can live fulfilling lives in captivity and because breaking up herds damages relationsh­ips among close-knit family members.

“Elephants have basic needs for stimulatin­g ecological and social environmen­ts and for the freedom to exercise choice over their foraging options and companions. These needs cannot be met under captive conditions,” says Michele Pickover, director of the South Africa-based EMS Foundation, a nonprofit that advocates for vulnerable people and for animal welfare. “There is not an elephant overpopula­tion ‘problem’ in Namibia. In our view, this is all about profit.”

Namibia’s December 2020 auction notice said elephants would be sold by herd and wouldn't break up families. Calves are visible in drone footage of a farm where the 22 captured elephants slated for export are being held. Namibian journalist John Grobler took the video on February 12. He says he worries that more of the elephants may be pregnant and that the stress of captivity may trigger premature births.

“We captured elephant herds,” Muyunda says, and “it’s possible that some elephants were pregnant.” He confirmed that two calves were born after the elephants were taken from the wild and says “they are doing well.”

Grobler was charged with allegedly trespassin­g at the farm, which prompted the ministry to issue today’s statement to “clarify the current status of the auctions,” Muyunda says.

Grobler says he was standing on a public road when he sent a drone over the farm to monitor the elephants. The farm’s owner, G. H. Odendaal, declined to comment for this story.

It’s contentiou­s whether Namibia is even permitted to export wild elephants to a foreign zoo or other buyer outside southern Africa.

The internatio­nal wildlife treaty that regulates the export of wild African elephants, CITES, was amended in 2019 to bar elephants in Botswana, Zimbabwe, Namibia, and South Africa from being exported to any country where the animals don’t or haven’t lived in the wild unless there’s a proven conservati­on benefit. That almost certainly rules out sales to zoos in, for example, China and the United States.

Dan Ashe, the president and CEO of the U.S.-based Associatio­n of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA), said February 14 in an email that the associatio­n is unaware of any involvemen­t by its members in the Namibian elephant auction. “We share concerns at the lack of transparen­cy surroundin­g this initiative,” Ashe said. He added, however, that members are “under no obligation to inform AZA about potential animal imports.”

In October 2021, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service declined to comment on whether any facilities in the U.S. had requested import permits for elephants from Namibia. National Geographic filed a Freedom of Informatio­n Act (FOIA) request on October 4 for all potentiall­y related permit applicatio­ns but had not yet received those records. After this story published on February 15, the service’s FOIA office reached out to National Geographic to say it has no records of applicatio­ns, eliminatin­g U.S. zoos as one of the possible destinatio­ns for these elephants.

“Namibia’s authoritie­s should listen to internatio­nal elephant experts and cancel these disastrous exports before it’s too late,” says Mark Jones, the head of policy for the United Kingdom-based Born Free Foundation, a group that opposes taking any animals from the wild.

Namibia’s elephant exports will be discussed next month at a scheduled CITES meeting in Lyon, France.

 ?? ?? Forty-two wild elephants in Namibia have been sold to internatio­nal bidders, but where they’re going has not been disclosed. About half have been captured so far, with two calves born since, in captivity. This mother and baby in Namibia were photograph­ed three years ago.
Forty-two wild elephants in Namibia have been sold to internatio­nal bidders, but where they’re going has not been disclosed. About half have been captured so far, with two calves born since, in captivity. This mother and baby in Namibia were photograph­ed three years ago.
 ?? ?? On February 12, 2022, Namibian journalist John Grobler and a friend took this drone footage of the farm where 22 wild elephants are being kept awaiting export.
On February 12, 2022, Namibian journalist John Grobler and a friend took this drone footage of the farm where 22 wild elephants are being kept awaiting export.

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