Slaughter of the elephants: Legal ivory sale linked to poaching surge across Kenya's huge Tsavo National Park

Slaughter of the elephants: Legal ivory sale linked to poaching surge across Kenya's huge Tsavo National Park
By Michael McCarthy, Reuters 
25 February 2009

An auction of legal ivory from animals like this South African elephant 
is thought to have encouraged poachers in Kenya

There has been an "unprecedented" surge in elephant poaching in one of 
Kenya's principal national parks since a large-scale ivory sale late 
last year, which gave a renewed boost to the international ivory market.

The sale was of more than 100 tonnes of legal ivory from four southern 
African countries whose elephant populations are not threatened, 
Botswana, Namibia, South Africa, and Zimbabwe. It was permitted by the 
UN's Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (Cites) in 
the teeth of fierce opposition from many observers, from 
environmentalists to politicians, who warned it was bound to stimulate 
the illegal ivory trade across Africa, and increase the killing of 
elephants in other countries further north where elephants are much more 
at risk.

The Labour MP Alan Simpson said at the time: "This is obscene. This 
isn't a licence to trade. It's a licence to kill, and Britain should not 
be party to it."

Now five elephants have been killed illegally in the past six weeks in 
Kenya's Tsavo National Park, home to Kenya's largest single elephant 
population of about 11,700. Kenyan wildlife officials and 
conservationists are making a direct link between the recent ivory 
auctions and the deaths.

"We have noted an unprecedented rise of elephant poaching incidents in 
Tsavo," said Jonathan Kirui, Tsavo's Assistant Director. "Our security 
team is on full alert, and is going full force to ensure the poachers 
are deterred."

James Isiche, the director of the East African regional office of the 
International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW), is concerned that the 
incident could portend a return to the mass-poaching era of 1970s and 
1980s, when African elephant numbers fell from 1.3 million to 625,000 in 
a decade; the international ivory trade was banned in 1989.

"We believe that there is a strong correlation between this upsurge and 
the ivory stockpiles sales allowed by Cites that were completed in late 
2008," Mr Isiche said. "Our concern is that the situation may be even 
worse in other elephant range states which face more serious law 
enforcement capacity challenges, as compared to Kenya or some of the 
southern Africa countries. The situation is dire, and needs to be 
stopped before it escalates further."

Only last week, a leading elephant researcher, Dr Cynthia Moss, released 
a report indicating that an elaborate poaching syndicate had led to a 
surge in elephant killings in another Kenyan National Park, Amboseli. 
Sources in the Kenyan Wildlife Service say elephant poaching in Kenya 
rose by more than 60 per cent in 2008 compared to 2007.

The bodies of the five elephants recently killed in Tsavo were found, 
with their tusks hacked off, in three different parts of the park. Kenya 
Wildlife Service rangers have arrested two suspected poachers and one 
middleman, and recovered two AK-47 rifles and 38 rounds of ammunition.

IFAW sources say the middleman had already sold the tusks to other 
dealers in the illegal ivory trade network. An elephant carcass was 
found close by. The other elephants are suspected to have succumbed to 
poisoned arrow wounds.

Many people warned that such killings would increase when news of the 
proposed four-nation ivory auction emerged last July. It was the second 
time since the 1989 ivory trade ban that a sale of legal ivory (from 
elephants that died from natural causes) was being permitted; the first, 
from the same four southern African countries, of 50 tonnes of ivory, 
was in 1997, pushed forward by Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe, in the face of 
many protests.

The second sale raised even more concerns, not least because, for the 
first time, China was being allowed to bid as a legal ivory buyer, 
alongside Japan. China not only has a potentially gigantic demand for 
ivory, but is already the home of a flourishing underground market.

Conservationists feared that the unleashing of a massive Chinese demand 
for traditional and popular objects such as trinkets, name seals, 
expensive carvings and polished ivory tusks would itself give an 
enormous boost to the illegal trade, which is entirely poaching-based.

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