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Africa | Southern Africa
Science - Education | Environment - Nature | Economy -
Development New study counters bid to
commercialise ivory
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Elephant in Kenya's Samburu National
Reserve: «People would be ashamed to be part of the
crisis.» |
| © Julian
Blanc/IUCN/afrol News | afrol News, 28 February - While Southern African countries are seeking to
re-legalise the ivory trade due to an abundance of elephants, researchers
have conducted a study that reveals the source of illegal ivory in Africa.
While elephants may face protection in the south of Africa, other African
nations fear the legalisation of the tusk trade.
African countries are divided over banning or
controlling international ivory trading, but need to reach a common
position if they are to ensure the survival of the continent's elephants,
a UN panel that has studied the situation said today.
In
particular Southern African countries have been doing heavy lobbying for a
re-legalisation of the ivory trade during the last years as elephant
populations are more than sound in their region. The strongly multiplying
giant is even threatening local environments. But other African regions
still have not achieved sustainable elephant herds and fear that
legalisation of the ivory trade may cause increased illegal hunting on
their threatened elephant populations.
According to David Morgan
from the agency deciding on international trade on animals and animal
products, CITES, African countries have filed three ivory proposals before
the body's conference this June in The Hague, where 169 nations will
debate new bans and quotas for trade in endangered species. "This
demonstrates the divisions that still exist between African countries on
the way to go forward for the conservation of African elephants," Mr
Morgan said.
"As long as Africa is divided, the chances of success
are not so high. We really need an African position on elephants," the
CITES specialist said.
Additionally, a new scientific report is
complicating the lobbying of South Africa and Botswana - the main nations
behind the ivory trade re-legalisation proposal. US researchers have
conducted a study that reveals the source of illegal ivory in Africa,
revealing that a legalisation of the trade would endanger elephants even
more.
According to their report, DNA test would help
conservationists and authorities in the continent to protect elephants
from being killed and turn their tusks to ivory. An international
convention banning ivory trade had been effected since 1989 - but this
does not prevent its trade in the black market.
According to a
report by Samuel Wasser of the Washington University's Centre for
Conservation Biology, the seizure of over six tonnes of ivory in Singapore
in June 2002 confirmed that elephants have been unprecedently slaughtered
for ivory purposes.
A 20-foot container packed with 6.5 tons of
contraband ivory from Malawi to the Far East thus was intercepted. "It was
the second-largest seizure of contraband ivory on record, the largest
since the 1989 ban took effect, and represented ivory from 3,000 to 6,500
poached elephants," Mr Wasser noted, adding that the assumptions by the
authorities that ivory had been collected from many different places,
especially from forest elephants, proved to be incorrect.
Researchers took samples of the confiscated ivory and compared
them with DNA tests collected from elephants. It was then that they
discovered that the seized tusks from the black market emanated from
Africa's broad savannahs in Zambia and not in forests.
Shortly
before the seizure, Mr Wasser argued, Zambia had petitioned for permission
to sell its ivory stockpiles internationally - stockpiles that were
supposed to have existed before the ban. But only 135 elephants were known
to have been killed illegally in Zambia in the previous 10 years, a figure
far below the single seizure in 2002.
"If people really realised
what is happening they would be ashamed to be part of the crisis," he
said. "We don't want to spend our time catching criminals, we want to stop
the crime from happening. That is the most effective enforcement you can
do."
Mr Wasser and his team believed that their research result
would cause law enforcement agents to substantially narrow the areas of
origin and the trade routes being investigated.
In recent, the
price of ivory has shot up, resulting to poachers to kill more elephants
to sell their tusks. Until the Washington study, authorities in most parts
of Africa are not sure of illegal hunting of elephants in their countries.
Mr Wasser argued that the continued loss of elephants will have
serious consequences.
"Elephants are majestic animals and are not
trivial to the ecosystem. They are a keystone species and taking them out
significantly alters the habitat," he said in a presented paper. "It has
ripple effects on lots of different species."
He said in August
2006, more than 23,000 kilograms of the contraband ivory have been seized
by the authorities. Mr Wasser assumed that "customs agents typically
detect only about 10 percent of contraband, so the actual amount of
poached ivory probably is closer to 234,000 kilograms. That means more
than 23,000 elephants, or about 5 percent of Africa's total population,
likely were killed for that amount of ivory."
China's mushrooming
economy is a major force driving the black-market ivory trade, escalating
prices and attracting organised crime, Mr Wasser said. "In 1989 a kilogram
of high-quality ivory was sold for US$ 100 on the black market. That rose
to US$ 200 in 2004 but by last year had ballooned to US$ 750 per
kilogram."
"If it really is organised crime that's driving this,
then the only hope we have of stopping it is to stop the ivory at the
source, to not let it into the international market. Because once it is in
the international market, the trade is very hard to stop," Mr Wasser
said.
An earlier report by the wildlife trade monitoring network
traffic and environmentalist group, WWF - which revealed several networks
of illegal trade in Nigeria, Senegal, Côte d'Ivoire and Nigeria - confirms
the problem of tracing the real source of the ivory trade. The ivory
probably stemmed from elephant poaching in Congo Kinshasa (DRC), Cameroon,
the Central African Republic and Gabon.
Undercover investigators
from the two groups had visited 9 cities in Nigeria, Côte d'Ivoire and
Senegal to map the trade. They found more than 4000 kg of ivory on public
display - a volume that represents the ivory of more than 760 elephants.
According to recent data from the world nature conservation
organisation IUCN, however, said there may not be any more than 543
elephants in these three countries. The investigation therefore seems to
have discovered an international trade in ivory, which is
illegal.
These studies show just a snapshot of the problem, said
Tom Milliken, director of TRAFFIC East/Southern Africa and co-author of
the WWF report. "When we factor in all of the uncontrolled manufacturing,
buying and selling over a year, these numbers climb to frightening
dimensions," he added. The ivory was not DNA tested.
By staff writers
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