제목   |  [WORLD] ELEPHANT SUMMIT CALLS FOR END TO IVORY TRADE 작성일   |  2016-05-02 조회수   |  2697

 

 

Giants Club elephant summit: Kenya calls for end to ivory trade


President Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya has urged an end to Africa's illegal ivory trade, saying it means death for elephants and death for tourism. 

He is hosting a summit of African leaders, business people and scientists in Nanyuki, central Kenya, to discuss how to save elephants from extinction. 

Experts warn Africa's elephants could be extinct within decades.

After the Giants Club summit ends on Saturday, Mr Kenyatta will help set fire to more than 100 tonnes of ivory. That is nearly the entire stock of ivory confiscated by Kenya, amounting to the tusks of more than 6,700 elephants. "It will be a pleasure to burn it and do my part to destroy any possibility that poachers and their accomplices might benefit from the slaughter of Kenya's elephants," he said in a statement published on Kenya's Daily Nation. Among those expected to attend the summit are Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni and President Ali Bongo from the west African nation of Gabon.

The ivory is getting through because people are prepared to pay for it. Stopping the men with arrows and the corrupt officials is just one part of the solution - the other is destroying the hunger for ivory. The love of ivory goes back millennia. Its pure, translucent beauty and the ease with which a tusk can be carved into intricate sculptures have given it a lasting value throughout the ages.Tackling demand and destroying the market are both important but there are also ways of making elephants more valuable alive than dead. In the parks and game reserves of Africa, close encounters with the most remarkable animals on the planet lie in wait - you just need time, patience and a good eye.

Rapid decline
Mr Kenyatta said elephant herds across Africa were being besieged by a new generation of poachers - well-armed and connected to international markets - and the results had been catastrophic.
"Ivory means death death for our elephants, our God-given heritage, and our tourism sector," he wrote. "Ivory also means illicit funding of terrorist activities in parts of the African continent. We all have to do everything within our power to stop poaching and trade in ivory."

The patron of the summit, UK-based newspaper proprietor Evgeny Lebedev, told BBC News it was aimed at raising funds for conservation and coming up with strategies to tackle conflicts between the animals and people. "Very possibly by 2025, these magnificent creatures will be completely extinct," he said.

Elephants, he warned, faced the prospect of vanishing from the wild like white rhinos.Researchers say Africa has only a 10th of the population of elephants it had nearly a century ago. It is home to between 450,000 to 500,000 elephants but more than 30,000 are killed every year for their tusks. Tanzania lost 65% of its elephant population in the last five years.

Pyres of ivory
The Kenyan ivory has been piled into a dozen giant pyres. It will be seven times the size of any stockpile destruction so far, and represents about 5% of global ivory stores. Some 1.35 tonnes of rhino horn will also be burned. 

The street value of the ivory to be destroyed is estimated at more than $100m (㿲m), and rhino horn at $80m. Appetite for ivory in Asia is fuelling demand, with the main trafficking route running through the Kenyan port of Mombasa.

Does burning actually destroy ivory?
"We don't believe there is any intrinsic value in ivory, and therefore we're going to burn all our stockpiles and demonstrate to the world that ivory is only valuable on elephants," said Kitili Mbathi, director general of the Kenya Wildlife Service.

Mike Pflantz, from the campaign group Space for Giants, told BBC News: "What we've got here is the politicians, the presidents, the leaders of the countries who host more than half of Africa's remaining elephants."

He called for "better rangers on the ground, better prosecutions in the courtroom and making sure that we try to stop elephants and humans interacting in a way that causes elephant deaths".



Vocabulary Words:
1. Urge - (verb) to advise or try hard to persuade somebody to do something
2. Summit - (noun) an official meeting or series of meetings between the leaders of two or more governments at which they discuss important matters
3. Corrupt - (adj.) (of people) willing to use their power to do dishonest or illegal things in return for money or to get an advantage
4. Herd - (noun) a group of animals of the same type that live and feed together
5. Poacher - (noun) a person who illegally hunts birds, animals or fish on somebody’s else’s property
6. Catastrophic - (adj.) (of a natural event) causing a lot of damage and suffering
7. Pyre - (noun) a large pile of wood on which a dead body is placed and burned in a funeral ceremony
8. Stockpile - (noun) a large supply of something that is kept to be used in the future if necessary
9. Street Value - (noun) a price for which something that is illegal or has been obtained illegally can be sold
10. Intrinsic - (adj.) belonging to or part of the real nature of something/somebody

Discussion Questions:
1. Do you think this move of the Kenyan government can and will stop illegal trade? 
2. Do you think hunting is a good thing or a bad thing? Why?
3. What other ways can you think of to help stop hunting and illegal trade?
4. "If the buying stops, the killing stops too. - Do you agree with this statement? Why or why not?
5. In your opinion, should hunting be illegal around the world? Why?

 

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