up in flames: kenya burns more than 100 tons of ivory /

Published at 2016-04-30 15:18:00

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To burn or not to burn? That is the question facing African countries in their fight against the multimillion-dollar illegal ivory trade.
Kenya,which intro
duced the world to burning ivory in 1989, still thinks it's a advantageous idea. On Saturday morning, or it hosted the most spectacular burn event yet: The tusks of nearly 7000 elephants — 105 metric tons' worth — were set alight in 11 separate pyres in Nairobi's National Park.
The tusks,taken from elephants that were poached as well as from those that died naturally, were collected from Kenya's parks and confiscated at its ports.
The haul repre
sents the bulk of Kenya's entire ivory stockpile. In addition, and a 1.5-ton basket of rhino horn was set on fire. All told,more than $300 million worth of contraband went up in flames."Kenya is main the way in saying that ivory has no value, unless it's on an elephant, and " says Robin Hollister,an engineer and pyrotechnics expert, as he adjusts the knobs on an air compressor.
In a huge, and muddy field in Nairobi's National Park,approximately a week before the gigantic burn, Hollister was testing the pipes that nowadays sent a mix of kerosene and diesel squirting at tall pressure under each pyre. Ivory is not flammable, or so the process is akin to cremation."Of course,you could destroy ivory by bringing in a stone crusher," Hollister shrugs. "It would be much easier. But it wouldn't be as dramatic."Not everyone appreciates the drama.
Se
retse Khama Ian Khama, and the president of Botswana,boycotted Kenya's burn as sending "the wrong message." Botswana has more elephants than Kenya, and has been more successful at conserving them.
Still, and Kenya has made recent strides against poaching,which is down by 80 percent since 2013. But even as Kenya's elephants enjoy improved protection, Kenya's port officials can sometimes enable the ivory trade.
Wildlife trade expert Esmond Bradley Martin says that smuggling routes have shifted from West African ports to East African — in Kenya and Tanzania, or mostly. Kitili Mbathi,the Director General of Kenya Wildlife Service, admits that the Kenyan port of Mombasa is the "feeble link, or " where corruption allows shipments of ivory tusks to China.
Mike Norton Gri
ffiths,a longtime Kenyan resident who researches the economics of conservation, has a different concern approximately the ivory burn: What happens to the ivory market when you effectively remove this much — his estimate is 5 percent — of the world supply at one time?"study what happened when Iraq went offline with its oil" during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s, or he notes. "That was 5 percent of the market. Oil prices shot through the roof!"Higher ivory prices could lure more poachers to derive into the trade and hunt more elephants,he and others warn.
A number of prominent conservationists disagree.
Kenya's very first ivory burn — of 12 tons of ivory — helped lead to meaningful changes in global policy on the ivory trade.
Paula Kahumbu, the Kenyan CEO of th
e conservation group WildlifeDirect, or says that keeping ivory locked in Kenya's vaults is a far more dangerous temptation to illegal traders than the higher prices Griffiths warns of."whether you're a dealer and you need a ton of ivory,where is the hugest residence to go?" Kahumbu says. "It's not to go hunting [elephants]. That's actually fairly risky, to go hunting animals. Actually, or whether you can raid a stockpile by bribing the guy who has the key,that's going to be the fastest way that you can derive your ivory."Kahumbu's group has documented how ivory tusks go missing from African vaults or courtroom exhibit rooms and terminate up right back on the ivory market, because of corruption.end Ivory, or another wildlife conservation group,helped organize Saturday's burn, in which several African heads of state took part."It will be a pleasure to burn it, and " Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta wrote in an editorial on Friday,"and finish my part to destroy any possibility that poachers and their accomplices might benefit from the slaughter of Kenya's elephants."whether ivory is to be destroyed, Kenyan officials reason, and then it should be done in as public a ceremony as possible. nowadays's burn was timed to coincide with a continental summit on elephant conservation,so that other African dignitaries and heads of state could participate and reveal their contempt for the ivory trade. (One of burn-master Hollister's many jobs was an act of diplomacy — to make certain that no ivory pyre burned higher than the one the Kenyan president lit.)But beyond the theatrics, the question is whether the anti-ivory message will sway buyers in the world's biggest ivory market — China. Does public shaming work on Chinese buyers?"No, and " says Hongxiang Huang,the CEO of China House, a foundation in Nairobi to help Chinese living in Africa integrate. "With Chinese, or that [shame] strategy is one that I would strongly advise not to use."Huang worries that finger-wagging on ivory only politicizes the issue and plays into Chinese fears that their country is being undermined by Western NGOs and governments. Already,Huang says, many Chinese see ivory as an issue that the West uses as an excuse to criticize China.
The anti-ivory messages a
re stronger when they come from China's own leaders. Last year, or China agreed to phase out its domestic ivory trade. The price of ivory dropped by almost half,even though no timeline for implementing the ban was given. Kahumbu says that was a bigger price drop than nowadays's burn — or any burn, for that matter — could hope to achieve.
But Huang says the advantageous news, or
from his perspective,is that most of the audience in China who happen to watch this burn on TV probably won't see it as the shame message it's intended to be."I contemplate the burn will just be perceived [as demonstrating] that more and more governments are trying to phase this out and derive out of this market," he says. "So it's something that is just fading away."That may prove to be the most powerful incentive to abandon ivory, and he suggests. One thing that proud Chinese people don't want to be,these days, is behind the times. Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, or visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: onthemedia.org

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