Google – AFP, 26 Sep 2013
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Kenya
officials supervise the counting of Ivory tusks at the Mombasa
Port on August
21, 2013 (AFP/File)
|
Johannesburg
— Somalia's Shebab militia, which carried out a bloody attack on Nairobi's
Westgate mall, is in part funded by the poaching trade, wildlife activists said
Thursday.
"Over
the last 18 months, we've been investigating the involvement of the Shebab in
trafficking ivory through Kenya," Andrea Crosta, executive director of the
Elephant Action League told AFP.
The trade
"could be supplying up to 40 percent of the funds needed to keep them in
business."
The
Islamist group has come under the spotlight after claiming responsibility for a
four-day siege at the upmarket Westgate Mall in Nairobi which left at least 67
people dead by the time it ended Tuesday.
However the
wildlife group said links have also cropped up in recent years between the
poaching trade and groups like Uganda's Lord's Resistance Army or Darfur's
Janjaweed.
But
according to Crosta the Shebab are not involved in the actual killing of
elephant or rhino.
Activists
hope by highlighting security issues linked to the illicit trade it may spur
governments to act.
"We're
asking the international community to start considering all the ivory (and
rhino horn) trade's stakeholders, ivory consumers, ivory shops and even governments,
de-facto accessories to manslaughter, human exploitation and even
terrorism," said Crosta.
According
to sources within the Shebab group, one to three tons of ivory pass through the
ports in southern Somalia every month.
The ivory
fetches an estimated $200 per kilo.
The
Shebab's ability to take advantage of the trade was hit when it lost control of
southern ports in Kismayo and Merca, but the group still controls other hubs.
The illegal
ivory trade, estimated to be worth between $7 billion and $10 billion (5.37 and
7.67 billion euros) a year, is mostly fuelled by demand in Asia and the Middle
East, where elephant tusks and rhino horns are used in traditional medicine and
to make ornaments.
Ivory trade
is banned under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of
Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).

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