Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

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Zim sitting on ivory worth $55 million

Zim sitting on ivory worth $55 million

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

The Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority has 55,000 kg of ivory 
in its national storeroom.
01.08.1201:28pm
by Zwanai Sithole Harare

Customs officials around the world seize tons of smuggled ivory every year. 
Customs officials around the world seize tons of smuggled ivory every year.

The Authority’s spokesperson, Caroline Washaya Moyo, said raw ivory sales 
were expected to resume after the expiry of a nine year moratorium in 2017. 
“Currently we are selling ivory to only Cites-approved ivory manufacturers 
at a price of $250 per kg,” she said.

A Cites approved ivory auction held in 2008 saw ivory sold to the Chinese 
government for $175 per kg. It entered the market at $1,700 per kg, but 
current market prices for ivory in China range from $750-$7,000 a kg, 
depending on the quality. African ivory is considered the best.

Washaya Moyo said the ivory was collected from elephants that die from 
natural causes, problem-animal control and confiscation from poachers. 
Zimbabwe, together with Botswana, South Africa and Namibia, is pushing for 
greater trade in ivory to boost national revenues, but environmentalists are 
averse to the call, saying it would lead to the depletion of elephant herds.

In a report commissioned by Cites for its meeting in Geneva last week, 
Zimbabwean consultant Rowan Martin, outlined proposals for how a future 
trade might take place. While some conservationists have sympathy with 
lifting the ivory trade ban under certain circumstances, the report was 
criticised as flawed by most present.

Martin, who has campaigned for the ivory ban to be lifted as a way of 
protecting elephants from illegal poaching by providing consumers with 
ivory, came under strong criticism. Delegates from India to Kenya condemned 
the idea of legalising trade as encouraging further demand and poaching.

They argue that the most effective way to protect elephants is by: improving 
monitoring systems; intelligence-led enforcement in transit countries; and 
widespread public education of consumers in countries such as China. “Some 
Chinese think tusks are like milk-teeth – they fall out and regrow with no 
harm to the elephant,” says Richard Thomas from the wildlife trade 
monitoring network Traffic.

More ivory was seized last year by customs officials around the world than 
at any time since a global ban was introduced in 1989. The escalating global 
trade has prompted calls from conservationists for the biggest market, China 
to shut down its legal domestic trade so that smugglers cannot use it to 
launder illegal ivory. 

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