Monday, 23 May 2016

Will Poachers Remember the Ivory Burn?

On April 30th, 105 tonnes of elephant and rhino ivory were stacked in 11 pyres, along with a collection of elaborate statues and carvings. Photographs of the macabre scene show the slowly blackening tusks and flames towering over park rangers, who were forced, even then, to guard the pyres from poachers. The largest ivory burn in history, it represented just 5% of global ivory stock. Although this is a small percentage it is shocking, as it equates to the deaths of an estimated 6,700 elephants, slaughtered just for their tusks.
This historical statement against the trade took place as a result of The Giants Club summit, which involved the African presidents from Botswana, Gabon, Uganda and Kenya. These regions hold more than half of Africa’s elephants.  Kenya’s president Uhuru Kenyatta stated during the ceremony:  “Ivory is worthless, unless it is on our elephants”. The ceremony was observed by conservationists, park rangers and regional government members, who had come to show their support for the cause.

There has been criticism as to whether this momentous symbol of defiance will work to dissuade poachers, as we have seen similar action being taken before.  In 1989 the Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species officially banned the commercial trade of elephant ivory. In order to commemorate the ban, 12 tonnes of ivory were burnt in Nairobi National Park. The event obviously did not deter poachers from the trade, however, as the number of ivory that has been seized in the following years has grown significantly.
While the aim of the ivory stock burn was to send a message to poachers that their illegal trade will no longer be tolerated, some activists are concerned that the matter may not have been dealt with correctly. They feel that this great protest has only increased the rarity of ivory, the consequence of which will be an increase in commercial value. Therefore, instead of discouraging poachers, they will now continue to pursue more elephants for their tusks.
I was interested to see how people had reacted to the chilling coverage of the story. While many shared their disgust at the reminder of how many elephants have been lost to poaching, others shared their exasperation that the ivory that had been destroyed was a ‘waste’, suggesting that it could have been sold instead in order to get funding for conservation.
Andrea Crosta, the Executive Director and Co-Founder of the Elephant Action League, very kindly provided his views towards this particular critique. He states that the idea is “flawed at the very root, as it assumes that ivory is a sustainable commodity that follows common market rules. It’s not sustainable at all and the “market” is […] a criminal enterprise.”
According to Crosta, the “legal domestic ivory market in China (and Hong Kong) is the single most important factor behind the current elephant poaching crisis”
This is due to the fact that in 2008 CITES approved a “one-off auction of legal ivory to China". The aim of this was to lessen the demand, however it caused the opposite. "It was a terrible mistake," says Crosta, "Any injection of ivory in the market, legal or illegal, fuels the demand." 

While this massive disposal of ivory may illuminate the tragic waste of life and create a longing for some good to come from it, we should stand by the only solution, as perfectly summarised by Andrea Crosta: “the only intelligent thing you can do is to destroy it, sending a very clear message – the only way to save the elephant is not to give any commercial value to ivory.”

 Thanks to the efforts of the people at Elephant League and Wild Leak, you can now anonymously report anyone who you may know to be involved in wildlife crime. Visit their website: https://www.elephantleague.org/ and press the red button to contact them anonymously.