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Zimbabwe leader blasts conservation watchdog over ivory trade
by Staff Writers
Harare (AFP) Aug 27, 2019

Zimbabwe's President Emmerson Mnangagwa has lambasted the regulator of global wildlife trade CITES over the continued ban in international ivory trade.

Global trade in ivory has largely been outlawed since 1989 after elephant numbers plunged from millions in the mid-20th century.

Zimbabwe and its two southern neighbours Botswana and Namibia, had requested a resumption of ivory sales to clear their stockpiles and fund conservation activities.

But their proposal was rejected by governments at the ongoing Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) meeting in Geneva.

The three countries' stockpiled ivory has a combined value of US$600 million (540.7 million euros), Mnangagwa said.

"It's a lot of money we can use for big projects," Mnangagwa was quoted as saying by the government daily, The Herald, on Tuesday.

"Our wild animals are being discussed in Geneva, an irrelevant place to the animals," he said referring to the 183-country forum.

"They bar us from killing our animals for selling ivory, but they want us to protect them from being poached," Mnangagwa protested.

"Europeans have consumed all their animals, but they want to set rules for us who have managed to conserve theirs."

Southern Africa is home to the majority of the remaining African elephants where populations have traditionally been better protected and healthier.

The overpopulation of the animals has resulted in them destroying crops and killing villagers living alongside the national parks where they are found.

The ivory stockpiles come from tusks from natural deaths, confiscations from poachers and culling.

Zimbabwe has permission to carry out culling to maintain a sustainable elephant population, but it has not done so in three decades.

"The last cull was in 1987, we have not carried out any because of disapproval by the various animal rights activists," Zimbabwe National Parks spokesman Tinashe Farawo told AFP.

Zimbabwe, which has an elephant population of 84,000 against it carrying capacity of 56,000, is permitted to issue licenses to commercial hunters to kill 500 elephants every year but most of the hunters take the tusks with them as trophies, said Farawo.

On Tuesday CITES imposed a near-total ban on exporting African elephants captured from the wild to zoos.

Near-total ban on sending wild elephants to zoos agreed
Geneva (AFP) Aug 27, 2019 - The regulator of global wildlife trade decided Tuesday to impose a near-total ban on sending African elephants captured from the wild to zoos, in a decision hailed by conservationists as "momentous".

Following a heated debate at a meeting of parties to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) in Geneva, the member countries approved a proposed text after a revision by the European Union included some exceptions to the ban.

The decision met with strong opposition from Zimbabwe in particular, which along with Botswana is the main provider of wild African elephants to zoos outside of the continent and tried in vain to block the vote.

But with 87 in favour, 29 against and 25 abstaining, the vote for the amended text secured the two-thirds majority needed to pass.

"This is a momentous CITES decision for Africa's elephants," said Audrey Delsink, the wildlife director at Humane Society International (HSI)'s Africa division.

The vote in plenary altered slightly a decision taken at the start of the 12-day conference -- set to wrap up Wednesday -- prohibiting the transfer of all African elephants caught in the wild to so-called captive facilities.

The decision only impacts African elephants. Asian elephants already enjoy more protection against international trade.

- Loophole -

The initial CITES vote was to limit trade in live wild African elephants to conservation in their natural habitats, basically ending the practice of capturing elephants and sending them to zoos and entertainment venues around the world.

The EU, which for technical reasons had been unable to cast its 28 votes during the first committee vote on August 18, had hinted it might join the United States and others in flatly opposing the text.

This prompted outcry, with a number of public figures including Jane Goodall, Pamela Anderson and Brigitte Bardot sending a letter to EU Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker asking that the EU back the ban.

In the end, the EU drafted an amended text, adding a loophole, saying the elephants should remain in their "natural and historical range in Africa, except in exceptional circumstances where ... it is considered that a transfer to ex-situ locations will provide demonstrable in-situ conservation benefits for African elephants".

In such case decisions should only be made in consultation with the CITES Animals Committee, and the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) elephant specialist group.

The EU amendment also made clear that African elephants caught in the wild and already in zoos could be transferred to other facilities outside of Africa.

Delsink told AFP HSI was "disappointed that there was a compromise", but she hailed that CITES and IUCN would have oversight over any decisions to take advantage of the "loopholes".

"It adds a layer of transparency, which is critical so that these situations can be very, very clearly evaluated by definitions produced by these bodies," she said.

- 'Certainly a start' -

DJ Schubert, a wildlife biologist with the Animal Wildlife Institute, agreed on the need to watch the implementation of the EU caveats "very closely."

Overall though, he told AFP the text agreed Tuesday "is certainly a start."

"It is a signal I think to the world that it is time to move beyond the idea that it is appropriate to keep elephants in captivity."

While elephants in western, central and eastern Africa have long been listed among the species in need of most protection under CITES, and thus banned from all trade, some trade has been permitted in southern Africa, where elephant populations are healthier.

Zimbabwe has for instance captured and exported more than 100 baby elephants to Chinese zoos since 2012, according to the Humane Society International.


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When the Asian tiger mosquito (Aedes albopictus) arrived in the United States in the 1980s, it took the invasive blood-sucker only one year to spread from Houston to St. Louis. New research from Washington University in St. Louis shows that the mosquitoes at the northern limit of their current range are successfully using time-capsule-like eggs to survive conditions that are colder than those in its native territory. The northern mosquitoes have adapted to colder winters, compared to their souther ... read more

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