![]() |
| Elephants tusks are in huge demand in Asia |
Related
Stories
- Zimbabwean elephants 'poisoned'
- Wildlife meeting bars campaigners
- Could legalising horn trade save rhinos?
More
elephant tusks were seized in 2011 than in any year since 1989, when the ivory
trade was banned, international wildlife trade group Traffic says.
The group
said elephants have had a "horrible year", with 23 tonnes of ivory
seized - representing at least 2,500 dead animals.
Trade in
ivory was banned in 1989 to save elephants from extinction.
But it has
continued illegally because of huge demand in Asia, where some believe ivory
has medicinal properties.
This is
despite ample scientific evidence to the contrary.
"The
escalating large ivory quantities involved in 2011 reflect both a rising demand
in Asia and the increasing sophistication of the criminal gangs behind the
trafficking," said a statement from Traffic, which monitors the trade in wildlife products.
"Most
illegal shipments of African elephant ivory end up in either China or
Thailand."
Shifting
smuggling route
The group
said there had been at least 13 large seizures of ivory this year, amounting to
more than 23 tonnes, compared to six last year of less than 10 tonnes.
"In 23
years of compiling ivory seizure data... this is the worst year ever for large
ivory seizures. 2011 has truly been a horrible year for elephants,"
Traffic's elephant expert Tom Milliken said.
Traffic
said the smugglers appear to have shifted away from using air to sea - in early
2011, three of the large scale ivory seizures were at airports but later in the
year most were found in sea freight.
"The
only common denominator in the trafficking is that the ivory departs Africa and
arrives in Asia, but the routes are constantly changing, presumably reflecting
where the smugglers gamble on being their best chance of eluding
detection," it said.
In six of
the large 2011 seizures, Malaysia was a transit country in the supply chain,
Traffic said.
In the most
recent case on 21 December, Malaysian authorities seized hundreds of African
elephant tusks worth about $1.3 million (£844,000) that were being shipped to
Cambodia.
The ivory
was hidden in containers of handicrafts from Kenya's Mombasa port, Traffic said.
Mr Milliken
said despite the seizures, there were generally few arrests.
"I
fear the criminals are winning," he said.
Some
environmental campaigners say the decision to allow some southern African
countries, whose elephants populations are booming, to sell their stockpiles of
ivory has fuelled the illegal trade.
Those
countries - South Africa, Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe - however, deny this
and argue they should be rewarded for looking after their elephant populations.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.