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At the 10th meeting of the Conference of the Parties
to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild
Fauna and Flora (CITES), held in Harare, Zimbabwe from 9 to 20 June 1997,
the status of the African elephant Loxodonta africana has been changed.
While the whole species was included in Appendix I since early 1990, as its
cousin the Asian elephant Elephas maximus, three populations of countries
of southern Africa, Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe, were transferred to
Appendix II but under a number of specific conditions. The decision entered
into force 90 days after the meeting, in accordance with the treaty, i.e.
on 18 September 1997.
From that date, although an
ordinary inclusion in Appendix II would have allowed Botswana, Namibia and
Zimbabwe to export elephant specimens subject to the provisions of CITES,
these three countries, because of the specific conditions attached to the
transfer, were only authorized to export live animals to appropriate and
acceptable destinations (for non-commercial purposes as far as Namibia is
concerned). In addition, Zimbabwe may export hides, as well as leather
goods and ivory carvings for non-commercial purposes. On 18 March 1999,
i.e. 18 months after the entry into force of the decision and if all the
conditions established in Decision of the Conference of the Parties to
CITES regarding ivory 10.1, also adopted in Harare, have been met,
Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe will be allowed to export, to Japan only,
stockpiled ivory originating from their populations. The total quantities
concerned would be of 25.3, 13.8 and 20 tons, respectively.
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The conditions to be met
before any trade in raw ivory may resume can be summarized as follows: 1)
deficiencies in enforcement and control measures, identified by a Panel of
Experts before the Harare meeting, have been remedied; 2) the reservations
entered by the three countries when the African elephant was transferred to
Appendix I in 1990 have been withdrawn; 3) the countries support and commit
themselves to international co-operation in law enforcement; 4) mechanisms
exist to reinvest trade revenues (from ivory) into elephant conservation;
5) a mechanism has been agreed by the CITES Standing Committee to halt
trade and retransfer populations to Appendix I in the event of
non-compliance with the conditions or escalation of illegal hunting of
elephant and/or trade in elephant products owing to the resumption of
trade; 6) precautionary undertakings by the three countries have been
implemented; and 7) international systems for reporting and monitoring
legal and illegal international trade, and illegal trade and illegal
hunting within or between elephant range States, through international
databases, have been agreed upon.
The fulfillment of these
conditions will have to be verified by the CITES Secretariat, in
consultation with the African regional representatives on the Standing
Committee (from Burkina Faso, Namibia and the Sudan), their alternates
(from South Africa, Tunisia and the United Republic of Tanzania) and other
experts as appropriate. Then, the Standing Committee must agree that all
the conditions have been met.
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Considering the established
conditions, it is interesting to note that the three range States
concerned, which have sound if not excessive populations of African
elephants on their territory, do not have their fate in their hands. Even
if they have met all the conditions relevant to them, they might be
prevented to resume trade in raw ivory, because others have not been able
or did not want to meet the conditions they have also to satisfy. This
might concern Japan, the country of destination of the ivory, whose
internal controls were not considered totally satisfactory by the Panel of
Experts, the Secretariat or the Standing Committee. In addition, after the
so-called experimental trade would have taken place, if there is an
escalation of illegal hunting of elephants and/or of trade in elephant
products owing to the resumption of legal trade, the trade will be stopped
and populations might be retransfered to Appendix I.
It is evident that amongst
those who were strongly opposed to the decisions made in Harare some, in
particular NGOs campaigning for animal rights, either have tried to reverse
the decisions (see the letter sent by the Management Authority of Israel to
the Chairman of the Standing Committee) or, without waiting the resumption
of legal trade in ivory, have spread out and continue to spread out
unverified information about alleged cases of poaching and declare them as
being a consequence of the Harare decisions. In doing so, they are
acting exactly as the CITES Secretariat was afraid of when it recommended
in Harare that those who spread stories to indicate that proposals are
designed to re-open “free” trade in ivory are acting against the
conservation of the African elephant.
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IWMC, in its statement at the
unofficial meeting of NGOs held at the occasion of the 40th meeting of the
Standing Committee, expressed the wish that the Committee would warn such
groups and ask them to think about the Secretariat's recommendations. This
has not been done but, at least, the Committee agreed that the Secretariat
should initiate work to verify reports of illegal killing through
consultation with national authorities, a type of verification which has
already proved useful in demonstrating that spread out information, in
particular about Kenya, was totally inaccurate.
Other progress has been
achieved since COP10 for the implementation of Decision 10.1, in particular
in the three range States concerned, as well as in Japan. The Standing
Committee, on its side, has agreed on the procedure to follow and on the
dates proposed for the steps required to be taken until its 41st meeting.
This meeting should be held in early 1999 (before 18 March preferably) and
during it the Committee should agree or not that the conditions described
in Decision 10.1 have been met. If so, the resumption of trade in raw ivory
will be possible under the form of the experimental trade agreed upon in
Harare.
IWMC, as all those who
believe that the sustainable use of species like the African elephant is
the best tool to conserve them, will continue to support the efforts
already accomplished by the range States concerned and Japan and still to
be made to ensure the proper implementation of the Harare decisions. It is
its conviction that such an implementation constitutes a real test case for
CITES because, if it turned out to be impossible, the only conclusion to
draw would be that CITES does not work and is useless. The whole
conservation community must work to demonstrate the contrary and make the
resumption of a limited and well-controlled ivory trade a success.
Elephant
Contraceptives? |
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