Guest guest Posted July 16, 2009 Report Share Posted July 16, 2009 I just love this reporting (sic). CITIES has banned trading, but countries do little to enforce. Why should they when CITIES itself sells ivory?!? Governments and private businesses are just trying to keep up and compete with CITIES. True, CITIES just sells dead tuskers bones, after they have died a ³natural death,² but how does that support a ban on ivory? It doesn't, CITIES sales just promote ivory in the marketplace. Until the legal ivory trade stops, there is no hope of stopping an illegal one, and these reports are meaningless. In fact, where does smuggler¹s captured ivory go? That¹s right, back to CITIES or other stockpiles, for sale later legally. So instead of focusing on the tons of ivory sold legally, it seems that we are more concerned about the kilograms being sold illegally. Now there¹s a real crime. Jigs in Nepal On 7/15/09 9:54 PM, " AZAM SIDDIQUI " <azam24x7 wrote: > Great job Kenyan authorities as always. > > It seems Kenya is fighting a lonely battle combating this wildlife > terrorism in the whole of African continent. > > Where are all the supporters of 'Culling', and that CITES? > Hang your heads in shame all those who lobbied hard to get wildlife > auctioned with the bloody hope of ending 'illegal ivory trade'. > > One can only wonder as to how many plane loads and ship loads of > ivory/ horns etc have already reached the destination safe. > > Azam > > http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jEF6-9TDtyETWGziiZ8rMaTTv0cg > D99EB85G0 > > Kenya seizes ivory, rhino horn heading to Asia > > By TOM ODULA 23 hours ago > NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) ‹ Kenya seized more than 300 kilograms (660 > pounds) of illegal ivory and black rhinoceros horn ‹ some of it still > bloody ‹ on a cargo plane headed to Asia on Tuesday, wildlife > officials said. > The blood on some of the 16 elephant tusks and two rhino horns > suggested the animals had been killed recently, said Patrick Omondi of > the biodiversity and research division of the Kenya Wildlife Service. > The contraband was hidden in wooden boxes shaped like coffins. > The flight originated in Mozambique and stopped in Nairobi en route to > Thailand and finally Laos. It was not clear where the items came from; > Omondi said they could have been smuggled into Mozambique from > Tanzania or South Africa. > Poaching elephants and black rhinos is illegal. The Convention on > International Trade in Endangered Species banned trade in ivory in > 1989 after a wholesale slaughter of African elephants by poachers in > the 1970s and 1980s. > But some countries have done little to enforce the ban. > The black rhino is only found in eastern and southern Africa. > Rampant poaching decimated the black rhino population from a high of > 65,000 across Africa in the 1970s. Southern Africa now has a > population of 3,600 black rhinos. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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