http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=87&art_id=nw20091222104816733C235887
'It has become like the drug trade'
December 22 2009 at 11:40AM
Three months from a major international conference on endangered
species, African countries are divided over whether a fresh
round of ivory sales should be allowed.
With black market sales on the rise again, some nations that
consider their elephant populations to be out of danger are
arguing stocks of the precious ivory should be sold legally.
Tanzania and Zambia, for example, have asked the CITES
(Convention on International Trade in International Species)
conference to be held from March 13 to 25 in Doha to authorise
them to sell 90 and 22 tonnes of ivory respectively.
This request for an exemption to the 1989 ban on ivory sales, a
measure destined to protect the African elephant and rhino, has
rekindled a war between countries with varying animal population
levels.
'We don't want to see elephants survive just in one corner of
Africa'
If elephants used to roam the African continent in their
millions, today they number somewhere between 400 000 and 600
000.
More than half are found in southern Africa with just a few
thousand, or sometimes a few hundred, in most western, central
and eastern African countries.
In some cases the animals have disappeared all together, for
example in Burundi, Gambia, Mauritania or Sierra Leone.
"We don't want to see elephants survive just in one corner of
Africa, just in southern Africa," said Patrick Omondi who will
head the Kenyan delegation to the Doha talks.
The last CITES conference in the Hague in June 2007 led to
confrontations between African countries but they eventually
reached a compromise prolonging the moratorium on ivory sales by
nine years but allowing Zimbabwe, South Africa, Namibia and
Botswana to make a one-off sale of 108 tonnes to buyers in China
and Japan.
Elephant protection groups argue that this legal sale increased
demand for ivory, much sought after throughout Asia for its
decorative qualities, boosting the black market.
In Kenya, the number of elephants killed by poachers rose from
47 in 2007 to 214 in 2009.
"If the trend continues this way, we can expect to see the
extinction of the elephant in our lifetime," said Patricia Awori
of the Pan African Wildlife Conservation Network.
"Our position is that the international community should sustain
the ban of selling ivory and rhino horns. By perpetuation of
poaching, we will eliminate these animals," Kenyan Wildlife
Minister Noah Wekesa told AFP.
Tanzania has a different argument. The authorities estimate that
their elephant population rose from 55 000 in 1989 to 137 000 in
2006.
"Elephants are increasingly becoming a nuisance to poor farmers
who are progressively becoming opponents to their conservation.
The sale of ivory seized or collected from animals that have
died a natural death is the best way of making the population
aware of the value of the animal," the Tanzanian government said
in the file it submitted to CITES.
Tanzania's proposal caused seven African countries, among them
Kenya and DRC, to submit a counter amendment asking for the
moratorium to be extended to 20 years from nine and calling for
a ban on any sales outside southern Africa.
"The illicit trade in ivory, which has been increasing in volume
since 2004, moved sharply upward in 2009", according to Traffic,
the wildlife trade monitoring network.
"The remarkable surge in 2009 reflects a series of large-scale
ivory seizure events that suggest an increased involvement of
organised crime syndicates in the trade, connecting African
source countries with Asian end-use markets," Traffic says.
The quantity of ivory seized has doubled in a year to reach 15
tonnes this year. Its market value is around 750 dollars per
kilogramme.
"It is really getting out of control, it has become like the
drug trade," Awori said. - AFP |