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- <text id=89TT2669>
- <title>
- Oct. 16, 1989: Ivory:Trail Of Shame
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Endangered Earth Updates
- Oct. 16, 1989 The Ivory Trail
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 66
- COVER STORIES: Trail of Shame
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Elephants face a grim struggle against greed and deceit
- </p>
- <p>By Ted Gup
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>Nature's great</l>
- <l>master-peece,</l>
- <l>an elephant,</l>
- <l>The onely</l>
- <l>harmless great</l>
- <l>thing; the giant</l>
- <l>Of beasts...</l>
- </qt>
- <p>-- John Donne, 1612
- </p>
- <p> Out of the gray Kenyan dusk, an elephant soundlessly
- advances to the edge of a water hole, its trunk raised high to
- catch the first scent of danger. Satisfied that the way is
- clear, it signals and is joined by a second elephant. In ritual
- greeting the two behemoths entwine their trunks, flap their
- enormous ears and clack tusk against tusk, sending the cold
- crack of ivory across the Ngulia Hills. That same sound is heard
- 10,000 miles away in Hong Kong and Tokyo, where ivory traders
- stack tusk upon tusk--more than 800 tons, scrubbed clean of
- blood and connective tissue and laundered free of illegality.
- </p>
- <p> Between Africa, littered with the bloated carcasses of
- elephants, and the huge stockpiles of the Far East is a trail
- marked by secrecy and deceit. It is a trail traveled by
- ruthless poachers, cunning smugglers, corrupt and inept
- officials, and the barons of the trade: a handful of men who
- have never seen an elephant in the wild. They and their wealthy
- customers do not understand--or choose not to--the high cost
- of this trade. They do not see the herds mowed down by automatic
- assault rifles, the tusks frantically hacked from the skulls and
- the orphaned and wounded elephants left to die. Ten years ago,
- 1.3 million elephants pressed the earth of Africa. Today there
- are perhaps 625,000.
- </p>
- <p> A storage room in Kenya's Tsavo National Park, where
- poaching has been rampant, bears witness to this carnage. Tiny
- bloodstained tusks from infant elephants fill an entire shelf.
- Each is the length of a candle. They come from three-, four- and
- five-year-olds who fell before a rain of automatic gunfire. In
- a corner of the room, elephant tails, rancid and maggot
- infested, lie in a heap. Behind the building, skulls bleach in
- the sun. And just up a slope, an orphaned elephant greedily
- nurses on a bottle of formula and suckles at the fingers of its
- human keeper. Unless led away, an orphan will linger by its
- fallen mother until it collapses from starvation or thirst. And
- a mature elephant coming across a carcass, even one streaked
- with vulture droppings, will try to rouse it to life with a
- gentle prod of its hind leg.
- </p>
- <p> Such scenes of slaughter, a tragedy overlooked for years,
- are at last forcing their way into the public consciousness.
- Reports of the elephant's plight are now stirring outrage in
- every part of the world. This week delegates from a hundred
- nations are gathering in Lausanne, Switzerland, to consider how
- to save the giant of beasts. They represent the countries that
- have signed the Convention on International Trade in Endangered
- Species (CITES), the treaty that regulates the trade in ivory
- and other products from threatened animals. The delegates must
- decide whether to declare the elephant an endangered species,
- an action that would trigger a global ban on the international
- ivory trade. The proposal has sparked rancorous debate, both
- inside and outside Africa, over whether such a ban could be
- enforced and whether it is the best way to save the elephant.
- </p>
- <p> More is at stake than the survival of a single species.
- Conservationists fear that if they cannot rally to the rescue
- of earth's largest land mammal, there is little hope of
- preventing a multitude of lesser creatures from slipping into
- extinction. The elephant has become emblematic of the wild and
- the struggle to preserve it.
- </p>
- <p> Repeated attempts to control the ivory trade have failed.
- The current system, set up under CITES in 1986, requires
- ivory-producing nations to adopt export quotas intended to
- safeguard existing elephant populations. In addition, each tusk
- in international trade must be covered by an export permit and
- marked with a unique serial number, which is recorded in a
- computer in Cambridge, England. Theoretically, that number
- allows nations to trace the tusk as it passes from country to
- country in trade. But many quotas have been ill-considered or
- ignored, falsified export documents have been discovered in
- numerous nations, and corrupt officials in collusion with
- traders continue to skirt the system.
- </p>
- <p> In recent months the trade has been in retreat. Responding
- to growing public indignation, many industrialized nations have
- declared a moratorium on ivory imports. Among them: the U.S.,
- France, West Germany, England, Canada and Australia. Japan and
- Hong Kong, the centers of the trade, followed suit. In Africa
- nations have declared war on the poachers. Thousands have been
- arrested, scores killed and tons of illicit tusks seized. Most
- significant of all, consumers are beginning to understand the
- link between their ivory baubles and trinkets and the mutilated
- carcasses from which they came. If regulation fails, consumer
- revulsion to ivory may be the elephant's last hope.
- </p>
- <p> Among those African nations whose herds have been hardest
- hit are Tanzania and Kenya. They lead the call for a worldwide
- ban, and are joined by conservation groups, including the World
- Wildlife Fund and Wildlife Conservation International. They
- argue that it will take decades for elephant herds to begin to
- recover, and that as long as there is any legal trade, the lure
- of profits will entice poachers and smugglers to beat the
- system.
- </p>
- <p> An equally powerful coalition is opposed to a global ban.
- Those few southern African countries--Zimbabwe, Botswana and
- South Africa--that have not been beset by poachers cull their
- herds to maintain the elephant populations at optimum levels.
- That culling produces legally traded ivory. Those countries say
- a ban would punish them for the corruption and inefficiency of
- other nations. Ivory traders and retailers, of course, also
- oppose a comprehensive ban, hoping to save an industry with
- annual revenues estimated at $500 million to $1 billion
- worldwide. They are joined by the CITES secretariat, a
- Lausanne-based bureaucracy that monitors the ivory trade.
- Together, the industry and regulators argue that a legal trade
- based on ivory from natural elephant mortality and culling
- produces revenues for wildlife management and for the benefit
- of local African communities as an incentive to protect the
- herds.
- </p>
- <p> Even if the necessary two-thirds of the delegates at the
- CITES meeting vote to declare the elephant an endangered
- species, nations can exempt themselves from a trade ban without
- penalty. That is what the southern African nations have said
- they will do if a compromise cannot be reached. The real danger
- is that other countries may also break rank. The more porous the
- ban, the more the opportunities for illegal trading. Already
- South Africa and Botswana are on the smugglers' routes. An
- ambiguous result in Lausanne could embolden the trade and
- undermine enforcement efforts in Africa. Time is not on the
- elephant's side. If the slaughter continues at the rate of the
- past decade, 1,000 elephants will be killed during the week of
- the debate.
- </p>
- <p> For more than 5,000 years, ivory's creamy luminescence,
- durability and grace under the carver's blade have fascinated
- humanity. Ivory anklets and combs have been found in ancient
- Egyptian tombs, and King Solomon is said to have sat upon an
- ivory throne. In its myriad forms, ivory has been a medium
- expressing both virtue and vice, creativity and crass
- extravagance. It has been used in rosary beads, pistol grips,
- lutes, dice, scepters, toothpicks, prayer wheels, fly whisks,
- mah-jongg tiles and chopsticks. In the past century, traders
- greedy for ivory attacked and burned African villages. Natives
- were sold into slavery and forced to shoulder the tusks out of
- the interior.
- </p>
- <p> This century saw ivory become a raw material for industry.
- In the 1920s thousands of elephants were butchered to meet U.S.
- demands for 60,000 ivory billiard balls a year and for hundreds
- of thousands of piano keys. In the 1970s ivory was a hedge
- against inflation, stockpiled and traded like bullion.
- </p>
- <p> Over recent decades the trade became concentrated in the
- Far East, where ivory ornaments are highly prized. Until this
- year's trade curbs, Japan, the largest consumer, took in some
- 40% of the world's ivory, in contrast to about one-third for the
- U.S. and Europe together. Last year Japanese carvers turned an
- estimated 64 tons of tusks into as many as a million hanko, or
- personalized name seals. Much of this ivory was bought from Hong
- Kong, which has long been the world's ivory marketplace. Between
- 1979 and 1987, Hong Kong imported 3,900 tons. That represents
- the death of more than 400,000 elephants.
- </p>
- <p> There is considerable mystery about how the ivory gets from
- Africa to the Far East. Over the past decade, as much as
- four-fifths of that ivory has been of illegal origin--poached, then smuggled. Sometimes the poachers cross borders to
- hunt, as from Somalia into Kenya or Zambia into Zimbabwe, then
- carry the tusks back by night. Some poachers are tribal
- villagers, illiterate and poor, who stalk their prey on foot,
- walking for weeks, living off game. A poacher in Kenya says he
- believes tribal charms make him invisible to antipoaching units.
- He buries his tusks in the village latrine or hides them in a
- nearby cave. He sells them for a pittance (as little as $40 for
- a tusk that may eventually bring $1,000 in Japan) to a respected
- businessman in a nearby town, who sells them to someone else for
- three times what he paid.
- </p>
- <p> But many of Africa's poachers operate with the cold
- precision of a crack military unit. They are well armed and
- organized into gangs of up to ten men. Their weapons, often
- AK-47 assault rifles, can pepper a herd with 30 rounds in less
- than five seconds. Frequently they are ex-army men. When they
- run into antipoaching units, they respond as trained soldiers
- would, withdrawing and firing, then scattering and rendezvousing
- hours or days later at prearranged sites. In Angola rebels help
- finance military operations with ivory. Among the larger bands
- of poachers, some men are designated as cooks, others as
- porters, assigned to lug the ammunition, mosquito netting and
- axes for cutting off tusks. Those who cross their path, be they
- ranger or tourist, risk death.
- </p>
- <p> The tusks go to collection points, and from there are
- carried across the continent, hidden in gas tankers and cargo
- trucks, personal luggage and shipping crates. The rewards far
- outweigh the risks. The owner of a truck carrying $2 million
- worth of illicit tusks and rhino horns was fined a mere $2,613
- by Botswa officials last year. His cargo was said to be bound
- for a South African firm with Hong Kong connections. Despite
- crackdowns, the poachers are undaunted. Just two weeks ago, in
- a predawn raid on a farm, Namibian officials seized 980 tusks.
- </p>
- <p> The trade could not continue on such a scale without the
- collusion of African officials. "So many of Africa's
- functionaries are corrupt," says K.T. Wang, one of Hong Kong's
- major ivory traders. "If they get money, they say it's legal
- ivory. If they don't get money, they say it's poached." Over the
- years, senior African officials, their spouses and close
- friends, and wildlife authorities have been implicated in ivory
- scandals.
- </p>
- <p> Some of the most blatant corruption has occurred in
- Tanzania. Last year a member of the country's parliament, Alli
- Yusufu Abdurabi, was discovered with 105 tusks. Abdurabi is now
- serving a twelve-year prison sentence for trading in illegal
- ivory. Indonesia's former Ambassador to Tanzania, Hoesen
- Yoesoef, was found trying to smuggle more than 200 tusks out of
- the country last January. Other illegal ivory was found in the
- hands of a Catholic priest, a leading local journalist and
- officials of the Iranian and Pakistani embassies. More than 280
- tons of illegal ivory has left Tanzania in the past three years,
- says Costa Mlay, director of the country's wildlife department.
- </p>
- <p> Tanzania is now getting tough. Since June 1, units of the
- police, army and wildlife department under Operation Uhai--Swahili for life--have arrested 1,840 people and seized more
- than 1,000 illicit tusks. Some frightened poachers dump their
- tusks into the Ruaha River rather than risk getting caught. But
- it is late for Tanzania's elephants. Between 1979 and 1987 their
- population plummeted from about 316,000 to 85,000.
- </p>
- <p> The ivory trail leading out of Africa varies according to
- the latest regulation and the current loophole. In recent years
- ivory has been smuggled aboard every mode of transportation,
- from commercial jetliners to the single-masted dhows that ply
- the ancient sea routes of the Indian Ocean.
- </p>
- <p> Over the decade, traders outmaneuvered attempts to regulate
- the trade by taking their tusks through nations that had not
- yet signed the CITES accord. In 1985 CITES agreed to register
- previously undocumented tusks in countries that promised to
- comply with the rules in the future. Such arrangements were made
- with Singapore and Burundi, which together had more than 390
- tons of ivory. Traders' ivory, once suspect because it lacked
- documentation, suddenly quadrupled in value. In countries
- intent on barring illegal ivory, customs agents have found
- thousands of tusks in crates marked BEESWAX, BONE MATERIAL,
- MARBLE and JEWELRY. But most illicit ivory slips through.
- </p>
- <p> Hong Kong has long been the crossroads of the ivory trade.
- Government figures show 675 tons of ivory stockpiled in scores
- of factories and about 300 shops. Ten families or syndicates
- account for three-quarters of the ivory Hong Kong imports each
- year. One of those is headed by Poon Tat Hing, whose ivory
- network has extended from Africa to Dubai and Singapore, and
- into Japan. His shop, Tat Hing Ivory, displays 6-ft.-tall ivory
- figures that sell for $15,000 and up. When asked where the ivory
- comes from, salesmen simply say "Africa." The Lai family's Kee
- Cheong Ivory Factory boasts in a brochure that it can produce
- 30,000 ivory bangles, 40,000 necklaces and 100,000 rings every
- month. In its squalid sixth-floor shop, high-speed drills send
- up plumes of ivory dust, and tusks registered in Singapore and
- Sudan are stacked like firewood.
- </p>
- <p> K.T. Wang, 66, a businessman with silver hair and
- impeccable manners, is the dean of Hong Kong's ivory trade. He
- has never been to Africa, and the only elephant he has seen was
- in the Paris zoo. Yet he is a major conduit for ivory entering
- both Hong Kong and Japan. In February he helped Tokyo's largest
- trader, Koichiro Kitagawa, purchase nearly five tons of Sudanese
- ivory for $1 million from another Hong Kong dealer. In 1987 he
- engineered the purchase of 26 tons of Congo ivory by the Osaka
- trader Kageo Takaichi. The $3.5 million shipment contained 2,052
- tusks.
- </p>
- <p> Wang built up huge inventories of ivory in Singapore in
- anticipation of the CITES registration. On Oct. 31, 1986--the
- last day that importation of ivory without CITES papers was
- allowed--more than ten tons of Wang's ivory arrived on a
- Boeing 707 from Burundi. When Chris Huxley, then a CITES
- official, examined some of the more than 50 tons of tusks Wang
- owned in Singapore, he found evidence that suggested some of the
- elephants had not died of natural causes: "A few had
- light-caliber bullet damage. Some still had considerable bone
- attached and had obviously been removed rapidly and/or by
- amateurs...a few had been buried."
- </p>
- <p> For years, ivory of questionable origin flowed into Hong
- Kong. Until mid-1988, the importation of carved ivory was
- largely unregulated, and so tusks lacking documentation were
- diverted through the Middle East and elsewhere, where they were
- lightly carved so they could enter Hong Kong as legal ivory.
- Last June, as nations moved to ban ivory imports, Hong Kong set
- up a special customs task force aimed at smugglers, as well as
- a 24-hour hot line. It has closed its borders to ivory imports
- for the time being.
- </p>
- <p> Hong Kong's traders, retailers and carvers--about 3,000
- people in all--are already suffering from the U.S., European
- and Japanese bans. Kwong Fat Cheung Ivory once employed 100
- carvers. Now there are five, all old men, who at night can be
- found sitting around a table eating a silent dinner of silvery
- fish, cabbage and egg. Behind them is a wall of ivory tusks in
- burlap sacks that were destined for Taiwan until that country
- declared a ban in August. "There is nothing to give them to do,"
- says Eddie Huen, one of five brothers who run the business
- started by their father. "They are just sitting, waiting for the
- future." The carvers are family to each other and have little
- life outside the factory. They live in the showroom, sleeping
- there on boards.
- </p>
- <p> By the time even registered ivory reaches Japan, the link
- with Africa is all but lost. On the wall of the Fuso Trading Co.
- in downtown Tokyo is a photograph of a lone elephant standing
- in silhouette against a red sunset. "We don't know exactly what
- country the ivory originated from, very sorry," says company
- accountant Miyako Yoshida. Last year the company imported 4.5
- tons of ivory from Singapore, of which 2.5 tons went for making
- piano keys. Once Yoshida and a customer saw a film in which an
- elephant was shot. She said they covered their eyes in horror.
- </p>
- <p> Until the early 1980s, the flow of undocumented ivory into
- Japan went virtually unchecked. The country was awash in bogus
- documents used to launder ivory smuggled out of Africa.
- International protests grew, and Japan's traders began to
- realize that the extinction of the elephant would eventually put
- them out of business. Since 1985 Japan has complied with CITES
- rules and earned high marks from some conservationists. Its
- imports fell from 475 tons a year in 1983 and 1984 to 106 tons
- in 1988.
- </p>
- <p> But Japan's ivory industry is determined to stay alive. In
- the two weeks before the country's June 19 ban on imports from
- non-African nations went into force, traders arranged for 35
- ivory shipments to Japan, weighing 29 tons--a fourth of 1988's
- imports. (Hong Kong officials worked overtime to approve the
- flurry of export permits for Japan-bound ivory.) In September
- Japan announced it was, "for the time being," adopting a zero
- quota for ivory imports. A government spokesman said Japan will
- follow closely the events at the Lausanne meeting before
- deciding whether to resume limited ivory imports. Japan's major
- traders have enough ivory to last a year or more.
- </p>
- <p> As many as 30,000 Japanese draw their living from ivory--as traders, carvers and merchants. But the import trade is
- controlled by a few. Two men, Takaichi in Osaka and Kitagawa in
- Tokyo, have accounted for as much as half the ivory entering
- Japan in recent years. Kitagawa, 47, is a stern man who presides
- over an industry in turmoil. He was twelve when he was
- introduced to what has been his family's business for nearly a
- century. His showroom, scanned by video cameras and kept moist
- by humidifiers, features a towering ivory pagoda and cases
- filled with ornate carvings. His computers track the movements
- of tons of ivory. Half of Kitagawa's stock goes to making
- figurines, about a third to name seals and the rest to jewelry.
- </p>
- <p> Only once has Kitagawa been grazed by the ivory scandals of
- Africa. That was four years ago, when he paid millions for 30
- tons of ivory bearing Ugandan documents. The papers were false.
- Kitagawa says he believed the documents were valid and trusted
- the ivory's seller, whose name he no longer remembers. There is
- no evidence that Kitagawa violated any laws, but the rules
- allowed him to purchase ivory that had been confiscated or whose
- origins in Africa were lost in the myriad transactions between
- that continent and Japan. Under "country of origin," some of the
- export permits say only "unknown" or are blank. Kitagawa bought
- 13 tons in Singapore last year and twelve tons from Burundi in
- 1987.
- </p>
- <p> Until now, the ivory trail has flourished under the less
- than watchful eye of the CITES secretariat. In 1985 when the
- organization announced its plan to register all tusks as part
- of an ivory-control system, conservationists hoped the illegal
- trade would be curbed. But the deals that CITES officials struck
- with Singapore, Burundi and other nations, under which
- undocumented ivory could be registered, moved a mountain of
- ill-gotten ivory into the marketplace.
- </p>
- <p> In Burundi alone, 90 tons was registered. "The sheer volume
- was mind blowing," recalls Ian Parker, an ivory expert who
- helped handle the registration for Burundi. "There were rooms--bathrooms, kitchens, garages, you name it--stacked with
- ivory to the roof." But Burundi did not keep its promise to get
- out of the business; instead it accumulated another 90 tons.
- Says Joe Yovino, former head of the CITES ivory unit: "No
- question, we got snookered." Yet four months ago, the CITES
- secretariat agreed to arrange for the sale of about 28 tons that
- had been seized by Burundi authorities. Jacques Berney, the
- deputy secretary-general of CITES, says he is convinced that the
- new Burundi government, which came to power in a 1987 coup, is
- sincere about keeping the agreement to halt additional ivory
- imports.
- </p>
- <p> Conservationists suggest that the secretariat's protrade
- policies may have something to do with its source of funding.
- Since its founding in 1985, CITES' ivory unit has received
- two-thirds of its budget--some $237,468--in contributions
- from ivory traders. Japan's trade association has contributed
- $139,701 to CITES' ivory unit, making it the largest single
- contributor. After CITES registered the Singapore ivory, much
- of which belonged to Hong Kong's Wang, he contributed $10,000
- to the organization. "When I saw my salary was coming from K.T.
- Wang, that just did it," said Yovino, then head of that unit.
- Yovino resigned two weeks later.
- </p>
- <p> The secretariat defends its cozy relationship with the
- ivory business. Eugene Lapointe, CITES secretary-general, says
- inadequate financial support from governments left the group
- little choice but to turn to the trade for money. CITES, he
- says, has no enforcement authority and should not be held
- accountable for policing. That, he says, is the responsibility
- of the individual nations. As for the amnesty granted the
- Singapore and Burundi ivory, the secretariat says a 1985 vote
- by its member nations empowered it to register all stocks.
- </p>
- <p> Current and former CITES staff members and consultants have
- actively led the fight against the proposed ivory ban. In July,
- Yoshio Kaneko, a staffer originally on loan from the Japanese
- government, wrote an editorial in a Tokyo daily on behalf of
- CITES, exhorting Japan and the trade to assert their economic
- interests and oppose the ban. And Zimbabwe's position paper
- against the ban, to be offered at this week's meeting, was
- written by former CITES staffer Huxley, who received $5,000 in
- funding for the study from the Japanese ivory association.
- </p>
- <p> Will the secretariat's campaign to block the ban succeed?
- Probably not, since the international momentum to do something
- for the elephant is strong. But little is certain. "I foresee
- chaos," says a spokesman for Botswana. In the final days leading
- up to the meeting, lobbying efforts by both sides reached a
- frenzied level. The vote in Lausanne will not be unanimous, and
- any prohibition of ivory trading will be at best a patchwork.
- As long as southern African nations such as Zimbabwe and
- Botswana refuse to accept the ban, ivory will be available for
- sale.
- </p>
- <p> So the future of the trade depends in large part on Hong
- Kong and Japan, the big consumers. Officials of both places
- have expressed deep concern at the catastrophic losses to
- Africa's herds and have vowed to place the preservation of the
- elephant ahead of the interests of the trade. In Lausanne that
- commitment will be tested. Japan has made admirable strides to
- restrict the trade, but its long-term stand remains a wild card.
- "We, of course, pay close attention to other countries'
- opinions," said a spokesman for the Japanese government. "We
- have not fixed our position." The Japanese have every right to
- feel that many Western nations have shifted their stance rather
- abruptly. Until its recent trade curbs, the U.S. bought
- one-third of Hong Kong's ivory products.
- </p>
- <p> Ultimately, many of the importers and the southern African
- nations hope for a situation in which moderate demand can be
- satisfied with legal ivory from controlled culling of elephant
- herds and natural mortality. That could theoretically keep both
- the elephant and the ivory industry alive. Such a delicate
- balance between supply and demand will be difficult to maintain.
- </p>
- <p> Demand for ivory is falling, but perhaps not fast enough.
- In 1979 Hong Kong imported 521 tons, representing 31,000
- elephants. Last year it imported only 290 tons, but it took at
- least 33,000 elephants to meet the reduced demand. That is
- because tusk sizes during the period fell from about 18 lbs. to
- 9 lbs. Older elephants have been wiped out in many herds, and
- younger animals are now the targets. Breeding patterns have been
- disrupted. In Tanzania's Mikumi National Park, 72% of the
- elephant families observed in a recent study were either missing
- adult females or were composed mostly of orphans.
- </p>
- <p> No matter what happens this week in Lausanne, the elephant
- will still be in some peril. Even if the ivory trade winds down,
- the elephant will face increasing encroachment from Africa's
- fast-growing human populations. African farmers or herdsmen
- trying to eke out a living covet the vast habitats set aside for
- animals and cannot understand why scarce financial resources go
- to protect elephants while people go hungry. To many Africans,
- the elephant is a five-ton nuisance that can trample a season's
- maize in seconds. As long as they feel that way, they will turn
- a blind eye to poaching. Revenues from tourism and safaris have
- yet to improve the lot of the African people enough to win them
- over to wildlife management.
- </p>
- <p> Education efforts, both in Africa and in ivory-consuming
- nations, should emphasize just how crucial elephants are to
- African ecosystems. Elephants not only inhabit but also shape
- their habitat. In their search for food, they uproot and topple
- trees, allowing grasses and shrubs to take root and sunlight to
- reach the ground. By digging with their tusks, the great beasts
- bring underground pools to the surface, creating water holes
- that sustain a host of thirsty creatures. Warns a May 1989 study
- by a consortium of conservationists: "The elephant's
- extermination will lead to biological impoverishment and
- domino-like extinctions over much of Africa."
- </p>
- <p> Such a prospect truly alarms Richard Leakey, the
- world-famous paleontologist who heads Kenya's wildlife
- department. Says he:"The elephant has been around a long time
- and has given such pleasure to so many and has the potential to
- give such pleasure to so many more. Should we allow it, through
- our inaction, greed and perhaps cowardice, to become an exotic
- on this continent? If not, how do we prevent it?"
- </p>
- <p> That is a question Japanese carver Koryu Kawaguchi asks as
- well. On the outskirts of Tokyo, the 70-year-old master carver
- sits on a tatami mat, his workbench and tools covered with a
- fine ivory dust. In his hands is an ivory figurine of the
- Merciful Mother Kannon, which he has been carving for a month.
- Beside him sits his son Ryusei, 37, a fourth-generation ivory
- carver. The elder Kawaguchi is a gentle man with a reverence for
- the gleaming white medium he has spent his lifetime bringing to
- life. His eyes are weak from the strain of the work. Only in the
- stillness of night does he carve the delicate faces. When he
- fashions the eyes, the nose, the mouth, he holds his breath to
- steady his hands.
- </p>
- <p> For years he believed his ivory was found in the fields of
- Africa at a common elephant graveyard. Fifteen years ago, he
- learned the truth. As he moved a section of ivory through a
- saw, the blade came to a screeching halt and broke. He looked
- down; in the heart of the tusk was a corroded mass of steel--a bullet. "When I saw that, I realized," he says, caressing a
- figurine in his hands. "I was shocked. If I had anything else
- to do, I'd change my job." From that day on, he has placed the
- ivory section with the bullet on his family altar. "We sprinkle
- some water on it every day," he says, "so we can pacify the
- spirits of the dead elephants." Even as he speaks, there are
- more and more elephant spirits to placate, and the clack of tusk
- against tusk in Africa grows fainter and fainter.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-