African nations smack milestone on Ivory Trade Ban
The UN forum on 14th June accepted a milestone nine-year ban on intercontinental ivory do business to trunk a surge in poaching that has killed up to 20,000 elephants per year. The ban will go into effect after the one-off sale by four southern African nations of government-held stock of elephant tusks. The exact amount of the stocks are in dispute, but may be 150 to 200 tonnes, according to Willem Wijnstekers, the secretary general of the 171-nation Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). The agreement, which breaks an 18-year deadlock and comes after weeks of sometimes fierce debate among African nations, was formally adopted by CITES almost immediately after it was submitted by Chad and Zambia “on behalf of Africa.”
Africa is a few of the continents blessed with wild flora and fauna that boosts tourism activities around the globe. Ranging from the Big Five Mammals, Reptiles to birds among other wild flora and fauna. This African solution to an African problem marks a great step forward for wildlife conservation, said Wijnstekers. At stake is the future of the world’s largest land mammal, which once numbered in millions. A century of hunting and poaching — which has increased sharply in the last six years — has reduced the African elephant population to approximately 500,000. Remaining herds are concentrated in southern Africa, with far smaller populations in some central and western African nations.
Based on seizures, experts estimate that between 12,000 and 20,000 elephants are illegally killed every year to feed illicit markets concentrated in East Asia. The one-off sale would cover ivory stocks in Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe registered as of January 31. The money raised would go into conservation programmes. The southern African nations initially opposed a moratorium on ivory trade, and had earlier sought annual export quotas. More than 20 other African nations, led by Kenya and Mali, came to CITES proposing a 20-year ban on all international commerce. They argue that limited trade simply encourages poaching and point to sharp increases in illegal commerce since occasional sales of ivory resumed in 1997 after an eight-year ban.
This is a clear win for elephants and the conservation efforts of all the range states led by Kenya and Mali, which had originally proposed a 20-year moratorium, said Peter Pueschel of the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW). Susan Lieberman of the World Wildlife Fund, which has invested heavily in elephant conservation programmes, also welcomed the deal, but said it should have detailed a plan for halting illegal ivory trade. This move hopefully succeeds as we conserve the Africans natural resources and maintain Africa as Number tourism destination in the world.