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Kenya ivory burn a beacon to the end of all ivory trade

Kenya ivory burn a beacon on the road to the end of all ivory trade

 

LONDON: As the Government of Kenya prepares to destroy a 106 tonne stockpile of ivory in a high-profile international event on April 30, the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) welcomed the move as a significant step towards ending all ivory trade and the epidemic of poaching which feeds it.

The Kenyan Government’s ivory burn will follow the Giants Club’s two-day wildlife summit in Laikipia, at which African heads of state are due to discuss combating the illegal ivory trade in one of the biggest government-led conservation conferences in the continent’s history.

Mary Rice, Executive Director and Team Leader of EIA’s Elephants Campaign, said: “Zero trade is a crucial step towards achieving zero poaching and Kenya is sending an unequivocal message to the major consumer markets of China and Japan that ivory has no place or value anywhere other than on living elephants.

“Pro-trade interests would have us believe that consumer demand can be satiated with stockpiled ivory supplying the market for a legal ivory trade, controlling prices and putting criminals out of business – but this deluded solution doesn’t stand up to the slightest scrutiny.

“The 1989 international ivory trade ban was working, and working well, until parties to the UN Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) were persuaded to undermine it by authorising ‘one-off’ sales, in 1999 and 2008. These served only to confuse consumers, stimulate fresh demand and provide a cover through which to launder black market ivory. This resulted in a swift and bloody spike in poaching which has made the past decade a catastrophe for elephant populations.”

EIA, which played an instrumental role in achieving the 1989 ban on international ivory trade, has long advocated that governments should consolidate, inventory and destroy ivory stockpiles after conducting appropriate forensic analysis and when it is no longer required for enforcement purposes.

Not only does public ivory destruction send a clear message to consumer countries that ivory has no legitimate value, disposing of stockpiled ivory plays a significant role in preventing corruption and facilitating leakage into illegal trade.

Since 2006, based on public records alone EIA has recorded at least 11 incidents in nine countries (Botswana, Cameroon, Gabon, Mozambique, the Philippines, Tanzania, Uganda, the UK and Zambia) where ivory has been stolen from supposedly secure stockpiles; the weight of ivory stolen has ranged from 3.35kg to three tonnes.

In Uganda, the loss of ivory was discovered in 2014 by the Government during a routine inspection of its ivory stockpile. The Government not only lost ivory from its stockpile back into the illegal trade but has also seized ivory that was likely stolen from other countries’ stockpiles.

 

 

EDITORS’ NOTES

  1. The Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) investigates and campaigns against environmental crime and abuses.
  1. Ivory destruction events since June 2013: Gabon, June 27, 2013 – 4.8 tonnes; Philippines, June 21, 2013 – five tonnes; USA, November 14, 2013 – six tonnes; China, January 6, 2014 – 6.1 tonnes; France, February 6, 2014 – three tonnes; Chad, February 21, 2014 – 1.2 tonnes; Belgium, April 9, 2014 – 1.5 tonnes; Hong Kong (China), May 15, 2014 – three tonnes; Kenya, March 3, 2015 – 15 tonnes; Ethiopia, March 20, 2015 – 6.1 tonnes; Dubai, UAE, April 29, 2015 – five tonnes; DR Congo, April 29, 2015 – five tonnes; France, May 22, 2015 – 0.4 tonnes; China, May 29, 2015 – 0.75 tonnes; USA, June 19, 2015 – one tonne, Mozambique, July 6, 2015 – 2.6 tonnes; Malawi, March 14, 2016 – 2.6 tonnes; Cameroon, April 19, 2016 – 2,000kg of ivory tusks & 1,753 trinkets.

 

Environmental Investigation Agency
62-63 Upper Street
London N1 0NY
UK
www.eia-international.org
Tel: +44 207 354 7960
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