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CITES: Win for Sustainable
Conservation of Elephants & Patience of Southern African Nations. Change in Kenyan "Protectionist" Stand Predicted.
Gigiri, Kenya - 18 April 2000:
Actions taken Monday on proposals related to the sustainable use of abundant
elephant stocks in four southern African nations were hailed as a victory for
the future of the animals and a testament to the wisdom and patience of the
people of Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe, according to IWMC World
Conservation Trust as the delegates to the 11th Conference of the Parties (CoP
11) to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES)
opened its second week in Gigiri, Kenya.
"The delegates’ decision to
maintain the southern African nations’ elephant stocks on Appendix II is an
acknowledgement of and highly deserved reward for those nations’ excellent
record of managing their wildlife resources," said Eugene Lapointe,
president of IWMC-World Conservation Trust and former CITES Secretary General
(1982-1990). "Appendix II is a sustainable management status that allows
highly controlled trade in surplus wildlife products, an important source of
hard currency that benefits the animals and people alike."
Lapointe said the outcome of
deliberations on elephant proposals showed the wisdom and patience of the
southern African people and predicted that Kenya will shift from its absolute
protectionist stand on wildlife management to one of "sustainable use"
by the next meeting of the CITES Parties. He also praised the CITES Secretariat
for rejecting the animal extremist groups’ illogical claims that poaching and
illegal trade is precipitated by legal trade in wildlife products.
"The representative of
Namibia said it best when he told the delegates that the ‘no-trade’ stand of
protectionist groups and nations forced developing nations with abundant
wildlife ‘to be beggars,’" said Lapointe. "Even Kenya is coming to
recognize the immense wealth nature and the animals provide."
The potential hard currency
revenues represented by trade in ivory from elephants that die from natural
causes each year is "fantastic," said Lapointe. Based on a formula
conservative continent-wide elephant population of 500,000 animals and a natural
mortality rate of 2-5%, the most conservative estimate of this ivory donated by
the elephants is 150-200 tonnes per year. That is tens of millions of U.S.
dollars that can and should be used for the conservation of all of Africa’s
wild resources and to help alleviate poverty, the prime cause of social unrest
and environmental pollution worldwide. Millions of more dollars can be generated
by trade in hides.¨
For further information,
please contact
Eugene Lapointe, IWMC President,
Former Secretary General of
CITES (1982-1990)
Tel/Fax: +1(727) 734-4949
or Email: iwmc@iwmc.org
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