Scottish Daily Mail

How torching £150 MILLION of ivory could help save the elephant

As world leaders declare war on poachers and light an extraordin­ary bonfire . . .

- By Robert Hardman spaceforgi­ants.org/ giantsclub/donate

FROM a distance, it looks as if someone is building a chi-chi new safari developmen­t on the edge of Nairobi. But as you get closer, you realise that these elegant constructi­ons are not made of traditiona­l wood, grass and mud. They are huge piles of ivory — 105 tons of the stuff, to be precise. And the really sobering statistic is that more than 20,000 elephants were killed to produce this lot. Yet tomorrow afternoon the entire haul, worth up to £150million on the black market, will be put to the torch, with heads of state and some of the world’s leading conservati­onists looking on. I hope they are standing upwind of all the smoke. Because this will be the biggest ivory bonfire in history.

It is designed to send a dramatic and uncompromi­sing warning to the poachers and crime syndicates who are threatenin­g to wipe out the mightiest creature on earth: we are coming to get you.

That, at least, is the intention. For now, the ivory hunters show no sign of abandoning their slaughter of Africa’s dwindling elephant population to feed a seemingly relentless Asian appetite for ivory ornaments.

The tusk inferno will mark the grand finale of a summit in Kenya which could determine whether the African elephant has a future or is condemned to join the growing number of species headed for extinction.

Because if poaching continues at its current level, there may be no African elephants left in the wild in a decade or two. The stakes really are that high.

Hence the importance of this summit. It is being watched from afar by the British Government and also by the Prince of Wales and his sons, who have had a hand in its creation.

For this is the inaugural meeting of the Giants Club, a new associatio­n of African nations which are home to the elephant, plus leading players in the wildlife game. And it is no mere talking shop. Club rules are strict.

Member states have to agree to meet specific conservati­on demands and funding objectives. And it must be the head of state who signs on the dotted line, ensuring that lines of communicat­ion go to the very top. Many countries, including South Africa and Zimbabwe, have yet to join.

But this morning presidenti­al delegation­s from four countries, representi­ng more than half of the remaining 400,000 elephants in Africa, will be present. The leaders of Botswana, Gabon and Uganda will join their host, Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta, in the town of Nanyuki.

There, too, will be leaders of the world’s main conservati­on organisati­ons and senior global emissaries, including America’s Deputy Secretary of State, brandishin­g a message of support from Barack Obama.

‘There has never been this level of engagement on this issue before. We are expecting real outcomes,’ says Dr Max Graham, 38, Cambridge zoologist and founder of the elephant charity Space for Giants. He had the idea for the new club, along with its patron, the London-based media owner and philanthro­pist, Evgeny Lebedev.

He points to the fact that 100,000 elephants were killed by poachers between 2010 and 2012, and that the death rate is continuing at 30,000 per year. That spells extinction.

The situation is critical for forest elephants, a sub-species particular­ly vulnerable to the poaching gangs, who hide from security forces beneath the forest canopy. In parts of Cameroon and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the entire forest elephant population has already been wiped out.

All over Africa, an increasing­ly bloody battle is being fought between the wildlife authoritie­s and well-armed poaching gangs, assisted by networks of corrupt public officials.

And the illegal trade is hitting not just animals but entire ecosystems. Take the elephant out of the equation in savannahs and forests where it has roamed since time immemorial, and the natural order of things collapses.

SO WHAT is driving demand? It’s not as if we need ivory to make piano keys, dominoes and knife handles any more. And the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) has banned all trade in tusks.

The heart of the problem is that ivory is an aspiration­al commodity in large parts of Asia, a symbol of wealth and success. And with the expansion of the upwardly mobile middle classes in China, Vietnam and elsewhere has come increased demand for ivory figures and carvings. Just as a Westerner might hanker for a Jacuzzi or conservato­ry, they dream of an ivory statuette on the mantelpiec­e.

It is, of course, illegal to import or export ivory any more. But historic supplies of ivory legally acquired in the past help provide unscrupulo­us Asian dealers with a good cover story when the authoritie­s come knocking.

What is beyond question is that poached ivory is being smuggled by the ton out of African ports such as Mombasa and Zanzibar. It is usually concealed in containers full of ordinary goods or crops, and signed off by pliant customs officials in the pay of the crime syndicates.

The current black market rate at the far end is said to be up to £1,400 a kilo. Several middlemen take a cut at every

stage, from the corpse in the bush to the backstreet­s of Beijing.

It is also Asian demand for the body parts of other endangered species such as the rhino and tiger — which are perceived to have magical medicinal qualities — that is driving those creatures to the brink of extinction, too.

With that in mind, our Government convened a summit of almost 50 countries in London in 2014 to agree fresh strategies to fight a trade that is now worth a staggering £13 billion each year. The Prince of Wales, the Duke of Cambridge — a hands-on patron of the charity Tusk — and Prince Harry were among the speakers.

Prince Charles singled out the elephant as ‘an integral part of the ecological and social fabric of the African continent’.

At the end of the summit, delegates signed a 13-page London Accord, agreeing, among other things, to elevate the trade in endangered species to the status of ‘serious’ crime. In other words, flogging rhino horns would henceforth rank alongside dealing in drugs.

There was another spin-off, too. The summit saw a separate agreement signed by several African states with major elephant population­s.

Driven by President Ali Bongo Ondimba, the president of Gabon, the Elephant Protection Initiative (EPI) committed its signatorie­s to draw up detailed plans for protecting their remaining elephants and disposing of their ivory stockpiles.

Gabon has suffered badly because it is home to more than half of Africa’s forest elephants. Yesterday it was announced that a team of British Army instructor­s has arrived there to help train park rangers.

AnD just as the London conference led to the creation of the Elephant Protection Initiative, so the EPI has led to this week’s first meeting of the Giants Club. You can’t join the club unless you signed up to the EPI.

A driving force behind the club’s establishm­ent has been Mr Lebedev, 35, owner of the London Evening Standard and the newspaper-turned-website The Independen­t. His first encounter with wild elephants was as a boy, accompanyi­ng his grandfathe­r, an eminent Russian zoologist, on a field trip.

He has been fascinated by the animals ever since, making regular trips to elephant conservati­on projects all over Africa.

‘This is the biggest meeting of its kind but we need to get on with it,’ he tells me. ‘We need to remember that an elephant is being killed every 20 minutes. If we let that carry on, this magnificen­t animal could be extinct as soon as 2025.’

As patron of the Giants Club, he has been keen to include internatio­nal business figures in this week’s summit, as well as major players in the media. Sir Richard Branson is among those who will join by video link.

Mr Lebedev points to the success of one recent anti-poaching initiative in northern Kenya with which he has been closely involved.

‘In two to three years they have seen poaching reduced by 80 per cent,’ he says, adding that many of the poachers are from very poor families. Some have now been retrained as game wardens.

The hope is that the summit will become an annual event, with more nations joining the Giants Club. Zambia, Rwanda, Chad and Ethiopia are all expected to sign up.

In years to come they may well be joined by a royal visitor, too. This is all meat and drink to the Duke of Cambridge.

Among the central figures at this week’s summit is Ian Craig, owner of the nearby Lewa Conservanc­y, the 55,000-acre Kenyan wildlife ranch where a young Prince William worked in his student days. It was there that the Prince proposed to Catherine Middleton in 2010 — and he was back there last month for the wedding of Mr Craig’s daughter Jessica, a former girlfriend.

It was also in Kenya that the world’s first ivory-burning took place in 1989, when 12 tons were torched.

Since then there have been occasional destructio­n ceremonies around the world, but never anything on the scale of tomorrow’s blaze outside nairobi.

‘It’s going to be very symbolic,’ says Mr Lebedev. ‘And it is saying, very clearly, that an elephant is worth more to us alive than dead.’

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 ??  ?? Symbolic: Thousands of tusks are piled up for burning tomorrow
Symbolic: Thousands of tusks are piled up for burning tomorrow

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