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- <text id=89TT0482>
- <title>
- Feb. 20, 1989: Last Stand For Africa's Elephants
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Feb. 20, 1989 Betrayal:Marine Spy Scandal
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 76
- Last Stand For Africa's Elephants
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Record ivory prices send poachers after the survivors
- </p>
- <p>By Eugene Linden
- </p>
- <p> Striding majestically across the savanna, the African
- elephant is an unmistakable symbol of power and strength. As
- recently as the 1970s, its numbers were so great that some
- conservationists worried about overpopulation. Now the elephant
- is involved in a desperate struggle to survive, and the reason
- for its peril is one of its glories: the huge creature's
- magnificent tusks of ivory. Since the early 1980s, the price of
- ivory has surged from $25 per lb. to $80 per lb. As a result,
- growing bands of wily and ruthless poachers have taken to
- hunting down elephants illegally all across Africa, killing the
- animals with everything from automatic weapons to poison. About
- 10% of the remaining African elephants were killed last year,
- reducing their ranks to fewer than 750,000. If the slaughter
- continues at the present pace, the wild elephant could be close
- to extinction within a decade.
- </p>
- <p> This week, to prevent such a tragedy, conservationists will
- unveil the most elaborate and costly plan in history to rescue a
- single species. Sponsored by the African Elephant Conservation
- Coordinating Group, a coalition of several international
- organizations, the plan calls for bolstering efforts to protect
- elephants against poachers, a study of ways to crack down on
- illegal trading of tusks, and a publicity campaign to alert
- people and governments to the relationship between the trade in
- ivory and the plight of the elephant. The AECCG hopes to raise
- at least $15 million in four years to finance its work.
- </p>
- <p> The effort may be futile, though, unless demand for the
- animals' tusks is reduced sharply. Ivory is fashioned into
- everything from billiard balls and knife handles to necklaces
- and figurines. Craftsmen have even carved tusks into ornamental
- replicas of AK-47 assault rifles.
- </p>
- <p> Theoretically, the business of taking ivory from animals
- alive or dead is highly regulated and ostensibly restricted by
- African governments. And under an international convention,
- there is a quota system that puts limits on the number of tusks
- each country can export.
- </p>
- <p> So much for theory. In reality, the quota system has been
- ineffective in controlling the trade. Up to 90% of the tusks
- that enter the marketplace have been taken illegally by
- poachers, and smugglers have little trouble getting the ivory
- out of Africa. Angolan rebel leader Jonas Savimbi has
- reportedly financed his insurrection with ivory taken from more
- than 100,000 elephants. Some countries seem to be conduits for
- the illegal trade. With roughly 4,500 elephants of its own,
- Somalia has still managed to export tusks from an estimated
- 13,800 elephants in the past three years, evidence that the
- country has been providing false documents for ivory poached
- elsewhere. In response, the U.S. is expected this week to
- announce a ban on imports of Somalian ivory.
- </p>
- <p> The leading destination for legal and perhaps illegal ivory
- is Asia. Hong Kong is a major manufacturer and exporter of ivory
- jewelry, and 30% of the colony's output goes to Americans.
- "People in the U.S. just don't connect ivory with elephants,"
- says Mark Stanley Price, a director of the African Wildlife
- Foundation, "but every bracelet represents a dead elephant."
- Another top consumer is Japan, where ivory has long been used
- for personalized seals called hanko. But under pressure from
- conservationists, Hong Kong and Japan have begun to check
- closely the documents on ivory imports to weed out illegal
- shipments. Japan's legal ivory imports, in particular, have
- dropped sharply in the past three years.
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, the decline in ivory trade in Japan and
- elsewhere may not reflect a drop in demand so much as the
- decimation of adult elephants. As mature elephants are killed,
- it becomes harder to satisfy the world's appetite for ivory.
- Stephen Cobb, who leads an ivory study for the AECCG, says the
- reduction in trade "is a clear sign of the collapse of
- exploitable elephant populations."
- </p>
- <p> Some conservationists would like to see a total ban on the
- ivory trade. But that would be no easier to enforce than the
- laws against selling cocaine and heroin. Dealers bold enough to
- defy the embargo could anticipate higher profits than ever.
- Moreover, poor African countries need the revenue from at least a
- limited amount of legal trading.
- </p>
- <p> Realizing that if elephants vanish, so might tourists, some
- African nations are determined to slow down the killing. In
- addition, the animal is a vital part of Africa's unique
- ecosystem. For eons, elephants have knocked down trees, helping
- to give Africa its distinctive mix of forest and savanna and
- opening up the land for other big mammals.
- </p>
- <p> Unwilling to let the elephant be wiped out, some governments
- have declared war on illegal killing. In Kenya armed patrols
- have orders to shoot poachers. Sometimes, though, the culprits
- are a formidable force themselves. At Kenya's Tsavo National
- Park, scores of poachers dressed in battle fatigues and armed
- with automatic weapons killed one policeman and wounded several
- others.
- </p>
- <p> Besieged by armies of hunters, many herds are literally on
- the run. Conservationists use the phrase "refugee elephants" to
- describe animals fleeing Mozambique to crowd into protected
- areas in Zimbabwe. The killing of older animals with the
- biggest tusks threatens to reduce herds to what Tanzanian game
- manager Constantius Mlay describes as collections of naive
- teenagers without the wise old elephants needed as leaders in
- times of drought and food scarcity.
- </p>
- <p> Conservationists cannot hope to protect elephants throughout
- their African homelands. For that reason, the AECCG, which
- includes such major conservation groups as the World Wildlife
- Fund, TRAFFIC and Wildlife Conservation International, envisions
- a triage approach. The group plans to concentrate its resources
- on about 40 populations that have the best chance of being
- guarded from poachers. That strategy would focus on saving about
- 250,000 elephants and would reluctantly leave another 500,000
- to their fate.
- </p>
- <p> This prospect is not so dismal as it sounds. If protected
- well, the remaining quarter-million elephants would be a large
- enough population to thrive and multiply again. In fact, David
- Western, director of WCI, asserts that if allowed to grow old
- and die naturally, the elephants in these herds could probably
- supply enough tusks to support an ivory market larger than
- today's illegal business.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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