Kenya Rallies for Elephant Ivory Trade Ban

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    Kenya Rallies for Elephant Ivory Trade Ban

     
    May 2007 -   Thousands of Kenyans marched in the 
    streets of Nairobi on Sunday morning to highlight their country's proposal 
    for a 20 year ban on trade in elephant ivory to the Conference of Parties 
    for the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, CITES, 
    set for June 3 to 16 in the Hague, The Netherlands. 
    The colorful procession at the city's Uhuru Park was addressed by Kenya 
    Wildlife Service Director Julius Kipng'etich. The crowd observed a 
    minute's moment of silence in honor of the three KWS rangers who were 
    fatally shot by poachers last week while protecting wildlife. 
    Kipng'etich said the loss of three rangers is an indication of what would 
    happen if the current ban on trade in elephant ivory is lifted. The ban 
    has been in place since 1989, but has been challenged at nearly every 
    CITES meeting since it was imposed. 
    The procession in Nairobi Sunday is "one of the last ditch efforts by the 
    Kenyan Government to win supporters for its proposal for a ban on ivory 
    trade to remain in force for at least 20 years," said Kenya Wildlife 
    Service spokesman Paul Udoto. 
    
    Kenya Wildlife Service Director Julius Kipng'etich, right, and Dickson 
    Lesimirdana of the Wildlife Protection Unit, center, lead Kenyans in a 
    procession in Nairobi Sunday. 
    The proposal by Kenya and Mali for a 20 year moratorium on ivory trade has 
    been submitted to the triennial CITES conference that opens next week. 
    The proposal has won wide support among African countries. 
    While some southern African elephant range states say they have "too many" 
    elephants, the IUCN-World Conservation Union put the continental elephant 
    population at between 472,269 and 689,653 animals in its African Elephant 
    Status Report 2007. 
    This is about 10 to 20 percent of the number of elephants in Africa in the 
    1930s and 1940s. The ivory trade is known to be behind most of the 
    killings. 
    Last week, Kenya hosted 11 other African countries at an African 
    Consultative Workshop in Nairobi to plan ways of lobbying other countries 
    to uphold and extend the ivory trade ban. 
    Eleven of the 12 countries attending the consultative meeting supported 
    the 20 year moratorium on ivory trade. They believe that allowing any 
    trade in ivory will increase the poaching of elephants. 
    Elephants killed for their tusks. Kenya, 1988. 
    At the consultative meeting, Kenya, Mali, Togo, Cote D'Ivoire, Burundi, 
    Rwanda, Nigeria, Southern Sudan, Sierra Leone, Congo Brazzaville and Chad 
    supported the moratorium. DRC Congo and Ghana did not attend the meeting 
    but have already stated their support for the proposal. 
    The Uganda delegate said he needed more consultation with the Ugandan 
    Government before either supporting or opposing the 20 year moratorium. 
    On Friday, the Kenya-Mali proposal received support from Europe, when the 
    European Parliament adopted a resolution on the EU objectives for the 
    CITES conference. The resolution adopted 546 to 13 urges the Commission 
    and the 27 EU member states to support the 20 year ivory trade ban. 
    CITES banned the international commercial ivory trade in 1989. Then, in 
    1997, recognizing that some southern African elephant populations were 
    healthy and well managed, it permitted Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe to 
    make a one-time sale of a stock of ivory to Japan totalling 50 metric 
    tons. The sales took place in 1999 and earned about US$5 million. 
    In 2002, CITES agreed in principle to allow a second sale from Botswana of 
    20 metric tons, a sale from Namibia of 10 metric tons, and a sale from 
    South Africa of 30 metric tons. 
    The one-time sales were made conditional on the ability of the MIKE 
    program - the acronym stands for Monitoring of Illegal Killing of 
    Elephants - to establish up-to-date and comprehensive baseline data on 
    elephant poaching and population levels. 
    MIKE was established to provide an objective assessment of what impact 
    future ivory sales may have on elephant populations and poaching. To date, 
    CITES has not determined that the MIKE baseline data have been assembled, 
    and so the sales have not taken place. 
    CITES says this issue will be revisited when the CITES Standing Committee 
    meets again in The Hague on June 2, the day before the Conference of 
    Parties opens. 
    
    Elephants in Botswana, where elephant herds number about 120,000 (Photo 
    courtesy Botswana Tourism)
    For this year's conference, Botswana and Namibia have jointly submitted a 
    new proposal to ease the conditions for permitting future sales of ivory 
    while maintaining the elephant populations of Botswana, Namibia, South 
    Africa and Zimbabwe in CITES Appendix II, which allows trade subject to 
    strict regulation. 
    In addition, Botswana is requesting authorization for a one time sale of 
    40 metric tons of existing ivory stocks followed by an annual export quota 
    of up to eight tons from its national elephant population. 
    African elephant range states will meet May 30 to June 1 in The Hague to 
    seek a common position on their proposal to CITES. 
    In Nairobi Sunday, Kipng'etich called on countries with demand for ivory, 
    especially Japan and China, to ban the trade in ivory to save elephants. 
    "We control supply but the countries where demand is high should equally 
    help us save the world's elephants," he said. 
    "The moment you create demand for any product, somebody has to supply it. 
    Unfortunately, in the case of ivory, elephants in Africa have to be killed 
    to satisfy this insatiable demand," Kipng'etich said. "Only elephants 
    should wear ivory." 
    
    Kenya Wildlife Service Director Julius Kipng'etich, left, and a local 
    police official examine a gun recovered from poachers last week in the 
    Tana River District. 
    Although some southern African countries, especially Botswana with its 
    120,000 elephants, could be suffering from their large populations, ivory 
    trade is not the panacea, Kipng'etich said. 
    "Kenya is willing to offer its elephant experts to help in managing 
    elephant populations, including trying contraception and translocation," 
    he said. 
    When independence from British rule was declared in December 1963, Kenya 
    had 167,000 elephants, but by 1989 their numbers had plummeted to 16,000, 
    said Udoto of the Kenya Wildlife Service. 
    Although the number of elephants have since increased to 30,000, Kenya 
    fears that the threat of insecurity is still too present for the ban on 
    ivory trade to be lifted. 
    Within the region, there are an estimated two million illegal small arms. 
    Kipng'etich says the 20 year moratorium proposal is meant to give African 
    range states time to mop up the illegal arms as well as "to do the proper 
    science of the business of wildlife conservation," 
    "If we don't protect our wildlife," he said, "future generations will 
    deliver a harsh judgement on us."    
    
           
          







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