East Africa News
Africa could lose 20 per cent of its elephant
population in a decade if current poaching levels are not slowed, animal
conservation groups warned today. PHOTO |JOURNO TOURISM
By The
Citizen Reporter
Posted Tuesday, December 3 2013 at 13:26
Posted Tuesday, December 3 2013 at 13:26
In Summary
- An
estimated 22,000 elephants were illegally killed across the continent last
year, as poaching reached “unacceptably elevated levels,” said a joint
statement by CITES, TRAFFIC and IUCN.
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Gaborone, Monday. Africa could lose 20 per cent of its
elephant population in a decade if current poaching levels are not slowed,
animal conservation groups warned today.
An estimated 22,000 elephants were illegally killed
across the continent last year, as poaching reached “unacceptably elevated
levels,” said a joint statement by CITES, TRAFFIC and IUCN.
“If poaching rates are sustained at current levels,
Africa is likely to lose a fifth of its elephants in the next ten years,” the
statement said.
The study was released as experts and ministers met
in Botswana today to look at ways to stamp out the elephant slaughter, which is
fuelled by a growing demand for ivory in Asia.
“We continue to face a critical situation,” said
John E. Scanlon, secretary general of the Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).
“Current elephant poaching in Africa remains far
too high, and could soon lead to local extinctions if the present killing rates
continue,” he said.
Scanlon described the situation in central Africa,
where the estimated poaching rate is twice the continental average, as
“particularly acute”.
There are around half a million elephants left in
Africa compared with 1.2 million in 1980 and 10 million in 1900.
Researchers believe that poverty and weak
governance in African countries harbouring elephants are the driving forces
behind a spike in elephant poaching.
Elephants are killed for their tusks that are used
to make prized ornaments.
Ivory trade is banned under the CITES, yet illegal
ivory trade is estimated to be worth up to $10 billion a year.
The price of ivory on the black market shot up
tenfold in the past decade to more than $2,000 per kilogramme. On average, an
adult elephant tusk can weigh 20 kg (44 pounds), according to experts.
In the past 13 years, the quantities of ivory
traded have steadily shot up, according to Tom Milliken, an ivory trade expert
with the wildlife monitoring agency TRAFFIC. (AFP)
“2013 already represents a 20 per cent increase
over the previous peak year in 2011; we’re hugely concerned,” said Milliken.
In recent years ivory trafficking routes appear to
be shifting from the traditional West and central African seaports to east
Africa with Kenya and Tanzania as the exit points.
Most of the ivory ends up in Thailand and China.
The group meeting in Botswana is expected to adopt
a pact that will commit signatories, including the biggest ivory markets such
as China, to demonstrate political will at the highest level in the fight
against poaching and ivory trafficking. (AFP)
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