Ivory Trade

Discussion on Elephant Management and poaching topics
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Lisbeth
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Re: Elephant Poaching & Ivory Trade

Post by Lisbeth »

Rubbish!

Vicuna is like raising impala; elephants, lions, tigers etc. is a completely different story 0*\

Some people should not be allowed to express their opinions publicly and this one couldn't care less about conservation nor does he care for the well being of animals :evil:


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Richprins
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Re: Elephant Poaching & Ivory Trade

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Who decides who may have an opinion? :-?


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Re: Elephant Poaching & Ivory Trade

Post by Lisbeth »

You are right, it is still permitted to have an opinion even if a stupid one, luckily ;-) But what he says has no sense IMO.


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Re: Elephant Poaching & Ivory Trade

Post by RogerFraser »

Poachers now gunning for elephants
https://www.iol.co.za/pretoria-news/wat ... s-15324155

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Glenn Phillips, Managing Executive at Kruger park, SANParks CEO Fundisile Mketeni and Hawks' Colonel Johan Jooste during a media briefing at SANParks Head Office in Sunnyside. Picture: Virgilatte Gwangwa
VIRGILATTE GWANGWA
virgilatte.gwangwa@inl.co.za

POACHERS are now gunning for elephants, and so far, 40 elephants had been poached by the end of May and only one arrest had been made in Phalaborwa.

This was revealed today during a rhino poachers' arrest media briefing at the South African National Parks head office in Sunnyside.

SANParks CEO Fundisile Mketeni said they have seen an increase in elephant poaching saying poachers poached anything they think is worth money.

"We are seeing an increase in elephant poaching because if poachers enter the park, they will kill anything they see as value.

"We therefore predict that we would lose about 97 elephants by the end of the year should poachers continue to enter the parks," he said.

phpBB [video]


Even so, Mketeni said they were happy to announce that they had arrested two suspects for rhino poaching.

This comes after the SANParks Environmental Crime Intelligence collaborated with the Hawk's Directorate of Priority Crime Investigation to look into rhino poaching.

Hawk's Colonel Johan Jooste said two suspects; Mandla Mashele 32 and Kelvin Malapane 30 were arrested and released on bail and are expected to appear in the Benoni Magistrate's Court on July 13.

“The people arrested were involved in acquiring rhino horns from the parks and facilitating them to the export markets for the South East Asians,” he said.

In 2016, Pretoria’s Rietvlei rhinos were poached leading to three white rhinos being dehorned.


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Re: Elephant Poaching & Ivory Trade

Post by Richprins »

Hmmm...I wonder if rhino poachers kill anything they think is worth money? Ellie poaching is a different kettle of fish altogether. It takes much longer to remove the tusks and involves a lot more heavy carrying, different concealment during transport etc.


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Re: Elephant Poaching & Ivory Trade

Post by Lisbeth »

"We therefore predict that we would lose about 97 elephants by the end of the year should poachers continue to enter the parks," he said.
At all the gates they must put up a signboard saying: NO POACHERS ALLOWED! :O^


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Re: Elephant Poaching & Ivory Trade

Post by Flutterby »

lol


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Re: Elephant Poaching & Ivory Trade

Post by Lisbeth »

Illegal ivory sold openly across Europe – study

Posted on 12 July, 2018 by News Desk in News, Poaching, Research, Wildlife and the Decoding Science post series.

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EU law requires government certificates for the sale of ivory acquired after 1947 and before 1990, but Avaaz said none of the ivory it bought had a certificate © AFP/Aris Oikonomou

Sourced from third-party site: Avaaz & AFP

Illegal ivory is being openly sold across the European Union, according to a report by the campaign group Avaaz. The report, which was published on Tuesday, claimed that the legal trade is covering up the illegal trade through an antique ivory loophole, and illegal pieces are being sold openly both online and in shops across the continent.

An antique ivory loophole has allowed illegal pieces to be sold as ‘antiques’ as no proof of age is required for antique ivory that predates 1947.

For the study, Avaaz bought 109 pieces of ‘antique’ ivory from 10 EU countries, and had them tested using radiocarbon dating at Britain’s Oxford University. The items were bought over a four-month period from Belgium, Bulgaria, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain and Britain.

The results found that at least one-fifth of the pieces came from elephants that were poached and slaughtered after the global ivory trade was banned in 1990, and three-quarters of the ivory were fake antiques and dated much later than 1947 – none of the ivory pieces they bought came with a certificate.

Under the EU’s rules, the legal trade in antique ivory items acquired before 1947 is allowed (with no legal requirement to provide proof of age), and all ivory acquired after 1947 and before 1990 must be sold with a certificate issued by the relevant member state.

“This bombshell evidence proves beyond doubt that illegal ivory is being sold across Europe,” Avaaz campaign director Bert Wander said in a statement. “It must spark the end of this bloody trade. Every day the sale of these trinkets continues is a day closer to wiping out majestic elephants forever,” he added.

The new evidence puts pressure on the EU to ban the trade outright because so many pieces are being passed off as ‘antique’ ivory from elephants killed before 1947.

“The Commission should close the antique ivory loophole, end ivory exports from Europe and shut down the EU’s internal trade in raw tusks,” Avaaz said.

“This is the only way it can preserve its status as a leader in fighting the wildlife trade and protecting African elephants,” it added.

Full report: Avaaz: Europe’s Deadly Ivory Trade (2018)


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Re: Elephant Poaching & Ivory Trade

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DNA sleuths bolster case against three ivory cartels

2018-09-21 12:49 - AFP

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DNA tests on smuggled elephant tusks have identified three major ivory cartels in Africa and are helping investigators bolster the criminal cases against some of the most dangerous traffickers, researchers said Wednesday.

Around 40 000 African elephants are killed every year for their tusks, which are illegally traded as part of a multi-billion dollar industry that extends from Africa to Asia and beyond.

Traffickers conceal their ivory in shipping containers – but inspectors peer inside just 1% of the one billion containers sent around the world each year.

Where physical inspections fall short, genetic testing has come to the rescue, said the report in the journal Science Advances.

Lead author Samuel Wasser, a professor of biology at the University of Washington, said an "important breakthrough" came when experts realised about half of the tusks were not in pairs. Often, one was missing.

So they ran DNA tests on 38 seizures from 2006 to 2015 to find out where the tusks came from.

They found 26 of the 38 matched a tusk seized at a different time.

They also discovered that two shipments with matching tusks would frequently pass through the same port, usually within 10 months of each other.

"This suggest the same major cartel was responsible for both shipments," Wasser told reporters on a conference call.

"We were able to identify what we believe are the three major cartels shipping tusks out of Africa."

They operate out of Mombasa, Kenya; Entebbe, Uganda; and Lom, Togo, according to Wasser.

Bolstering case

Wasser said his team's research has been able to link far more ivory to certain criminals, bolstering the legal case against them.

Chief among them is ivory "kingpin" Feisal Mohamed Ali, a Kenyan national who had his 20-year jail term overturned earlier this year by a judge who cited "gaps" in the evidence against him.

Ali was arrested in Tanzania in 2014 in connection with two tons of ivory – 228 whole tusks and 74 pieces – found in a Mombasa warehouse. Authorities put the value of the ivory at $4.2m.

His case has been referred to a lower court, said Wasser.

"There is a great deal of evidence we have uncovered – as have others – that link him to multiple seizures," Wasser said.

"Our hope is that the data presented in this paper will help strengthen the case against this cartel."

Wasser said DNA analysis from his lab was "instrumental" in the conviction of another ivory smuggler, Emile N'Bouke, nicknamed "The Boss" (Le Patron), allegedly the largest ivory trafficker in west Africa.

In 2014 he was handed the maximum sentence under the law in Togo for possessing 700kg of ivory – two years in jail.

Since then, more DNA analysis has linked N'Bouke to other criminal syndicates in Africa, Wasser said.

"We had not yet developed the links between all these different seizures, Wasser said.

"This is a case where we wish we had this data sooner," he said, adding that "eyes are still on him".

Since most ivory traffickers face prosecution for a single seizure, being able to connect individual traffickers to multiple large seizures can raise the stakes, allowing them to be charged with major transnational crimes and face tougher penalties.

John Brown, special agent in the US Department of Homeland Security and country representative for HSI Nairobi, said the DNA analysis has been "important" in the pursuit of multiple ongoing investigations, though he declined to go into further detail.

"Dr. Wasser's lab has provided hard evidence to identify, dismantle and disrupt criminal organizations behind illicit trade in wildlife," Brown said.

Smugglers and poachers are "very well organised" and "can be violent", Brown said.

Trade in ivory was banned in 1989 under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).

Wasser said that even though most of the DNA data relates to tusks that were trafficked from 2011 to 2014, a period of rapid escalation, the science is still relevant today.

"It takes a long time to catch these guys," he said.


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Re: Elephant Poaching & Ivory Trade

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\O


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