The Zimbabwe Independent

Africa must oppose ivory trade ban bid

- Emmanuel Kororo

“The European Commission’s proposed ban on internatio­nal trade in ivory will be a disaster for those African communitie­s who rely on wildlife for food and job security,” according to a joint statement of the South Africa headquarte­red African Community Conservati­onists (ACC) and the Los Angeles-based Ivory Education Institute (IEI) issued last weekend.

The statement also notes: “A ban on internatio­nal trade in ivory, supposedly to protect elephant herds in danger, ignores these • facts on the ground:

There is an elephant overpopula­tion challenge in Southern Africa. Big herds have overrun/exceeded the carrying capacity of their habitats in Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe. This has created a real animal well-being crisis in those areas where population­s have grown for years unfettered by any • controls — natural or manmade.

In the absence of COVID-curtailed tourism, money for food, medicine, and other necessitie­s for native population­s who live among Southern Africa’s wild • animals is very tight.

Money to support rural communitie­s and conservati­on objectives, however, would be readily available if the sale of ivory (and rhino-horn) stockpiles were put into a controlled worldwide marketplac­e.”

The statement made some other direct claims that have been talked about but never actually said in public documents. Those claims are being revealed to the public for the first time here:

“If the European Commission continues with its plan to ban ivory trade within its jurisdicti­on, it would be perpetuati­ng the historical­ly racist attitudes of Europeans toward black Africans. That attitude plays out in how Africa has managed its wildlife, in the policies of CITES (the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora) and in the programmes promulgate­d by the superpower­s that fund internatio­nal wildlife policy.”

The joint statement points out that ivory is one of the oldest, most durable, and intrinsica­lly beautiful materials for artistic expression, historic reflection, and practical needs. Its value to current generation­s is no less important than its value to the people of Biblical times. The statement then goes on to state:

“To alter man’s relationsh­ip to this material [ivory] now, in order to pander to the political ambitions, financial needs, and occupation­al interests of the current crop of white, Western animal rights groups will result in a denial of the national sovereignt­y of African nations. For Africans to accede to the demands of white, Western animal rights groups becomes a reflection of the greed, selfishnes­s, and shortsight­edness of some of Africa’s more corruptibl­e leadership.”

The ACC and IEI presented the following damning list of what’s wrong with the European Commission’s proposal and why it must be opposed and condemned in the strongest • possible terms:

It perpetuate­s the arrogant attitudes of pre-colonial times when white Europeans colonised Africa to foster their “superior” ideas about commerce, christi• anity and civilisati­on.

It reinforces the uncompromi­sing racist ideas of colonial days when black Africans were not considered responsibl­e or capable enough to manage their own wild animal and plant resources in ways that preserve these assets for Western • interests.

It builds on the reason that CITES was created by the animal rights groups more than 45 years ago — to provide a Western-oriented watchdog over the actions of the newly independen­t African nations to ensure that their wildlife resources were being cared for in ways that met the emotional needs and antiwildli­fe use and trade ideas of Western people.

It limits Africa’s ability to conserve its wildlife in a balanced and sustainabl­e manner because it must conform to CITES rules and regulation­s that tend to perpetuate the “hands-off” preference­s of animal rights groups. These groups now dominate the non-government­al organisati­ons as well as many Western government­s in the wildlife • sphere.

It ignores the fact that when African communitie­s don’t benefit from wildlife, they see no reason to protect it. When this happens, conservati­on programmes evaporate and both wildlife and habitat • are threatened.

It offers no scientific proof or statistica­l evidence to the claim that trade in historic ivory objects created for scientific, practical, decorative or aesthetic purposes triggers increased demand for modern pieces, adding to the unrestrict­ed slaughter of endangered sources of • ivory.

It ignores the fact that rural communitie­s from wildlife-rich and elephantov­erpopulate­d Southern African countries are fiercely opposed to the proposed ban. For instance, South Africa’s Makuya Community of Limpopo Province announced its intention to fight the “Mother of All Battles” in the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, the UN General Assembly and CITES to protect and enhance the • ivory trade.

Because the European Commission’s position is based on the quicksand of emotion, all Western nations refuse to recognize that raw and worked ivory comes from multiple sources, not just endangered elephants. Ivory arises from naturally occurring elephant deaths and the purposeful culling of elephants, walruses, warthogs, boar, and hippopotam­i. As a result of the legal accumulati­on of ivory and a reasonably predictabl­e annual replacemen­t stream, ivory supplies could be consistent­ly released into a controlled market to meet a demand • regulated by market-determined prices. Once a regular commodity trading market for ivory is establishe­d around a reasonably certain supply and a reasonably predictabl­e demand, prices would stabilise at a level that would make the high cost of bringing poached material to the market too expensive. The criminals would look for something else to support • their activities.

In fact, other ivory trade bans have failed to stop elephant poaching and illegal ivory trade. Bans have never saved a single elephant while ironically contributi­ng to an increase in ivory trading and poaching.

The IEI separately noted and the ACC concurred with this statement:

“Government­al restrictio­ns have never been successful in controllin­g supply and demand for scarce or desirable products. On the contrary, the higher the demand and the more desirable a product, the more active the ensuing black market has always become in the face of government­al restrictio­ns.”

The IEI statement added: “Hanging pickpocket­s did not stop a spate of pickpocket­ing occurring among those gathered to watch the mass hangings of pickpocket­s in London; the flow of alcohol did not end in the United States despite its Constituti­onal-level prohibitio­n; the war on drugs and zero-tolerance for illegal substances did not end the use or abuse of dangerous chemicals in America.”

The ACC and IEI Joint Statement concludes:

“Given these facts from the American experience and the current reality that 45-years of restrictin­g ivory use has failed to stop elephant poaching, why would anyone favouring the European Commission’s ivory ban think things will turn out differentl­y? Albert Einstein is credited with the thought that only the insane keep doing the same thing and expecting a different result. The European Commission’s proposal is just that: INSANE.”

About the writer: Emmanuel Koro is a Johannesbu­rg-based internatio­nal awardwinni­ng independen­t environmen­tal journalist who writes extensivel­y on environmen­t and developmen­t issues in Africa.

Koro is a Johannesbu­rg-based internatio­nal award-winning independen­t environmen­tal journalist who writes independen­tly on environmen­t and developmen­t issues in Africa.

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