The Independent

India’s U-turns on decades of anti-ivory advocacy

- NAMITA SINGH

An unpreceden­ted decision by India to abstain from a recent vote to re-open the commercial sale of African elephant tusks has alarmed experts who fear that any change in the country’s decades-old anti-ivory advocacy will lead to a softened stance against the internatio­nal trade of ivory.

On 18 November, Zimbabwe tabled a proposal during the ongoing conference of the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (Cites) in Panama, to seek controlled trade in ivory from the country and its neighbours, Namibia, Botswana and South Africa.

Although it was roundly defeated 83-15 with a two-thirds majority vote against the motion, India changed its stance and became one of the 17 countries that abstained from the vote, reported the Indian Express newspaper.

Even though the country now faces backlash from experts over its decision, Indian officials have defended its move, saying the “Indian vote did not matter”.

“It is completely wrong to say that India has changed its stand,” an official at the Ministry of Environmen­t, Forest and Climate Change said in a statement to The Independen­t.

“India did not support the proposal of Namibia, South Africa and other African countries to lift the ban on ivory trade,” the official added. “Indian laws are strictest in the world and don’t allow trade in ivory. Neither our legal position has changed nor there is any plan to dilute it.”

The ministry defended its statement saying: “It was clear from the discussion that the majority of countries are against the proposal, hence Indian vote did not matter. The proposal was defeated by a wide margin.”

But the country’s abstention has increased concerns among conservati­onists.

The Indian Express reported that the decision was attuned to demands from Namibia, which recently transferre­d eight cheetahs to India this summer for an ambitious Indian project to revive the population of the world’s fastest land animal in the country.

While the outlet reported that Namibia sought India’s support under the commitment to help “sustainabl­e management” at Cites for its longstandi­ng proposal to allow trade in ivory, the

Indian government issued a statement on 13 October denying support for “lifting the ban on trade in endangered species”.

The Independen­t has reached out to the environmen­t ministry seeking clarificat­ion on whether the abstention was related to the translocat­ion of the cheetahs, but is yet to receive a response.

India pioneered the domestic ban on the ivory trade in 1986, three years before an internatio­nal ban came into effect.

In 1989, the signatory countries to Cites agreed to accord the highest protection to African elephants and move it to Appendix I, after the species was threatened with extinction, explains Matthew Collis, deputy vice president for conservati­on at USbased animal welfare charity Internatio­nal Fund for Animal Welfare (Ifaw).

Trade of specimens protected under Appendix I is permitted only in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces for non-commercial purposes such as scientific research.

“Asian elephants had been listed on Appendix I from the outset of Cites in 1975,” he tells The Independen­t. “In 1997, the elephant population­s of three southern African nations, Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe, were downlisted to

Appendix II to enable a ‘one-off sale’ of stockpiled ivory to Japan.”

Appendix II lists species that are not necessaril­y threatened with extinction, but may become so unless trade is closely controlled.

“Later South Africa’s elephants were also downlisted and another ‘one-off’ sale of stockpiled ivory from the four nations took place in 2008 to Japan and China. After this sale in particular, poaching skyrockete­d across Africa,” adds Mr Collis.

“At the height of the poaching crisis at the start of the last decade, as many as 20,000 elephants were being killed every year for their ivory,” he says. “Poaching seems to have declined a bit since then, especially in eastern Africa, but in some parts of Africa it is still a significan­t concern for the future of certain elephant population­s.”

Illegal trade in ivory continues, with criminals still seeking to get poached ivory into markets. According to Cites data, 2019 represente­d the third largest year in terms of the total weight of ivory seized: a whopping 51,161kg.

These included three exceptiona­lly large seizures, including 7,482kg of raw ivory seized by China and exported to the country from Nigeria. Singapore reported a seizure of 8,795kg of raw ivory exported from the Democratic Republic of Congo and

another by Vietnam officials, seizing 9,104kg of raw ivory, also exported from Congo.

As a result, a proposal moved by Namibia seeking controlled ivory trade by delisting the elephant population­s of their country along with Zimbabwe, Botswana and South Africa from Appendix II was rejected at the 17th and 18th Conference of the Parties (Cop) in 2016 and 2019 respective­ly.

India voted against the motion both times and strongly advocated for higher protection of the elephant population at earlier Cop meetings as well.

It opposed downlistin­g South Africa’s elephant population from Appendix I to II in the 1994 Cop meeting at Fort Lauderdale, reported the Indian Express. A similar stance was adopted during the 1997 and 2000 CoPs, which saw India moving a proposal demanding greater protection of elephants in Appendix I.

“It was disappoint­ing to see India abstain on the vote about ivory stockpile sales,” says Mr Collis about this year’s Cop. “India has historical­ly been a great champion of elephant conservati­on and consistent­ly voted against ivory trade that has caused the deaths of hundreds of thousands of elephants globally in the last century, including Asian and African elephants.”

“It’s unclear whether this is actually an official change in stance or something prompted by political negotiatio­ns related to other issues at this conference,” says Mary Rice, executive director at UK-based nonprofit Environmen­tal Investigat­ion Agency (EIA), which probes environmen­tal crime and abuse.

Even as the proposal remains defeated, Ms Rice adds: “We need to keep a close eye on this.”

The four African countries supporting the proposal argued that since their elephant population­s are gaining strength, internatio­nal sales of stockpiled ivory can help them generate the revenue needed for elephant conservati­on, thereby helping their local communitie­s.

But Steven Galster, an environmen­tal investigat­or and founder of Bangkok-based anti-poaching charity Freeland, slams the move saying the world’s biggest threat to wildlife today is actually legal trade.

“The only way to ensure traffickin­g stops is to stop legal trade,” he says, listing government­s supporting trade as the number one enemy of wildlife conservati­on efforts, above poachers.

Opposing efforts to legalise elephant ivory trade, Mr Galster says every time the government­s “get support and we see resumed legal sales, we also see poaching rise”.

“This is because the legal trade masks an illegal trade, which burgeons with cover. Revenue for elephants or any wild animal conservati­on should not come from selling carcasses. That simply puts a higher value on a dead animal over a live one and encourages poaching,” he explains.

As has been evidenced multiple times, any legal market for endangered species – ivory, tigers, rhinos, pangolins – provides a laundering mechanism for illegal products, stimulates demand and therefore, as a result, gives rise to illegal trade and traffickin­g, explains Ms Rice.

“As these illicit markets are often internatio­nal in nature, the existence of legal markets provides loopholes that organised criminal networks can exploit and we would hope that India would choose not to start providing such a loophole.”

Mr Collis says India’s voice carries a lot of weight as a stronghold for the vast majority of remaining Asian elephants.

“Asian elephants still bear the scars of poaching, with a wildly skewed sex ration in most population­s, due to only male Asian elephants having tusks and therefore being heavily poached for ivory,” he says.

He is, however, sympatheti­c towards demands from Zimbabwe and other southern African nations, saying they have put a lot of effort into conserving large elephant population­s, for which they deserve credit, given the burdens they bear to do this.

But Mr Collis demands the internatio­nal community find a way to generate income for conservati­on without exposing elephant population­s to the risk of further poaching.

“We have seen the devastatin­g effect of the ivory trade on elephant population­s across the world that have been ruthlessly targeted by poachers. Any legal ivory trade provides opportunit­ies for criminals to launder poached elephant ivory into the market.”

Mr Collis says Kenya proposed an idea to establish a fund that could become accessible to all elephant range states that destroy their ivory stockpiles as a new way to create resources to support elephant conservati­on, research programmes and local livelihood­s for communitie­s living alongside elephants and other wildlife.

“Sadly, when presented earlier in the Cop, there was some opposition to this idea,” he says, but expresses hope that the countries will return to the idea.

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 ?? (AFP/Getty) ?? Students wearing anima l masks protest during the opening day of the Wor l d Wi l d l ife Conference in Panama City
(AFP/Getty) Students wearing anima l masks protest during the opening day of the Wor l d Wi l d l ife Conference in Panama City
 ?? l (AFP/Getty) ?? Seized anima l body parts inc l uding pango l in sca l es and e l ephant tusks on disp l ay at the customs comp l ex in Port K l ang in Se l angor, west of Kua a Lumpur
l (AFP/Getty) Seized anima l body parts inc l uding pango l in sca l es and e l ephant tusks on disp l ay at the customs comp l ex in Port K l ang in Se l angor, west of Kua a Lumpur
 ?? (AFP/Getty) ?? Protesters at the opening day of the Wor l d Wi l d l ife Conference
(AFP/Getty) Protesters at the opening day of the Wor l d Wi l d l ife Conference
 ?? (AFP via Getty I mages) ?? A member of staff of the Zimbabwe Nationa l Parks shows ivory stored inside a strong room during a tour of the stockpi l e by EU envoys, in Harare
(AFP via Getty I mages) A member of staff of the Zimbabwe Nationa l Parks shows ivory stored inside a strong room during a tour of the stockpi l e by EU envoys, in Harare
 ?? (AFP via Getty I mages) ?? Ma l aysia’s customs officers disp l ay some of the 6,000kg of seized e l ephant tusks at the customs comp l ex in Port K l ang in Se l angor
(AFP via Getty I mages) Ma l aysia’s customs officers disp l ay some of the 6,000kg of seized e l ephant tusks at the customs comp l ex in Port K l ang in Se l angor
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