Tanzania to use its Sh186 billion ivory stockpile for awareness
The Citizen
May 30, 2022
See link
https://www.thecitizen.co.tz/tanzania/news/national/tanzania-to-use-its-sh186-billion-ivory-stockpile-for-awareness-3831996
for photo.
DAR ES SALAAM: In a move meant to formulate a continent-wide position on
the trade in live elephants and ivory stockpiles, Tanzania says it is
committed to conserving wildlife, including elephants, and using stockpiled
ivory for awareness purposes.
The stance follows a ministerial conference, dubbed “the Elephant Summit”,
held in Harare Zimbabwe recently, whose aim was to build consensus among
African countries for the coming 19th meeting of the Conference of the
Parties (CoP19) to be held in Panama in November.
Although other invited countries such as Kenya did not attend, having
repeatedly demanded a total ban on trade in elephant products, Tanzania was
represented by Ms Mary Masanja, the Deputy Minister for Natural Resources
and Tourism.
She said Tanzania together with other countries in Southern Africa that
were present in the meeting called for creation of a special fund to cater
for compensation to those that would be affected by the direct impact of
human-wildlife conflict.
“We also called upon Western countries to stop interfering with in matters
regarding conservation in Africa…we will do it the way we see fit,” Ms
Masanja said
Moreover, Tanzania’s new position on the matter, follows President Samia
Hassan’s comments during the filming of The Royal Tour documentary, whereby
the President said the country’s stockpile would neither be sold nor
destroyed.
“Selling this in an open market, would only send the wrong message, and
will likely drive demand, and leading to even more poaching,” she said.
“We are in a dilemma...we can’t sell them, we can’t burn them, we are just
going to leave them like as they are to educate the world that this thing
has to stop…the wanton slaughter of elephants genocide has to stop,” she
added.
In fact, according to the documentary, in just five years (2009-2014),
Tanzania lost 85,000 elephants to poachers, which was 60 percent of the
country’s total population. While in the last decade alone, it is estimated
that at least 40 tonnes of Tanzanian ivory have reached the international
black market.
For his part, Mr Aron Msigwa, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism
spokesperson, told The Citizen, “Our stand is still the same. It hasn’t
changed...the stockpile dates a long time back. Our focus is now on
conservation and the fight against poaching, as well as against
human-wildlife conflict.”
Between 2009 to 2013, Tanzania made several attempts to dispose of its
stockpiled ivory worth $80 million (Sh186 billion) and a proposal to
downgrade the elephant’s endangered status, insisting that the stockpile
weighing more than 100 tonnes was from dead or culled animals that were not
poached.
For instance, in 2010, a request by Tanzania and Zambia to hold one-off
sales of their ivory stockpiles was rejected. Both countries had proposed a
relaxation to trade restrictions on their elephant populations by moving
them from Appendix I to Appendix II.
While Appendix I suggests the highest level of protection under the
Convention, banning all international commercial trade, appendix II allows
some regulated international commercial trade.
While Tanzania was asking to sell almost 200,000 pounds of ivory that would
have generated at least $20 million, Zambia wanted to sell 48,000 pounds of
ivory.
Media reports indicate that both countries argued that its elephant
population had reached the point where they were trampling crops and
killing too many people.
They also said preventing them from selling the stocks which come from
natural deaths or controlled culling of problem animals - would increase
anger toward the beasts who are seen increasingly as pests by affected
communities
But on the other hand, in 2012 a fresh bid by Tanzania to be allowed to
sell its stockpiled ivory was turned down. This prompted the country in
2013 decided to abandon its efforts to sell them, a decision which was
commended by many stakeholders, including the African Wildlife Foundation
(AWF).
It is documented that Tanzania is a home to one of the largest
concentrations of African elephants on the continent.
According to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) it is estimated that there are
only 415,000 African elephants compared to 10 million in 1930. However,
their populations have been growing rapidly in southern Africa.
African elephants consist of two subspecies – savanna elephants which roam
plains and the lightly wooded savanna of southern and east Africa, and the
smaller forest elephants, which live in the tropical jungles of west and
central Africa.
Most African elephants are currently included in Appendix I of CITES, which
limits trade in all products derived from the animals.
The elephant populations in Zimbabwe, Botswana, Namibia and South Africa
are included in Appendix II, which is less restrictive, but a special
annotation deems their ivory untradeable.
https://www.thecitizen.co.tz/tanzania/news/national/tanzania-to-use-its-sh186-billion-ivory-stockpile-for-awareness-3831996
Tanzania to use its Sh186 billion ivory stockpile for awareness
The Citizen
May 30, 2022
See link
<https://www.thecitizen.co.tz/tanzania/news/national/tanzania-to-use-its-sh186-billion-ivory-stockpile-for-awareness-3831996>
for photo.
DAR ES SALAAM: In a move meant to formulate a continent-wide position on
the trade in live elephants and ivory stockpiles, Tanzania says it is
committed to conserving wildlife, including elephants, and using stockpiled
ivory for awareness purposes.
The stance follows a ministerial conference, dubbed “the Elephant Summit”,
held in Harare Zimbabwe recently, whose aim was to build consensus among
African countries for the coming 19th meeting of the Conference of the
Parties (CoP19) to be held in Panama in November.
Although other invited countries such as Kenya did not attend, having
repeatedly demanded a total ban on trade in elephant products, Tanzania was
represented by Ms Mary Masanja, the Deputy Minister for Natural Resources
and Tourism.
She said Tanzania together with other countries in Southern Africa that
were present in the meeting called for creation of a special fund to cater
for compensation to those that would be affected by the direct impact of
human-wildlife conflict.
“We also called upon Western countries to stop interfering with in matters
regarding conservation in Africa…we will do it the way we see fit,” Ms
Masanja said
Moreover, Tanzania’s new position on the matter, follows President Samia
Hassan’s comments during the filming of The Royal Tour documentary, whereby
the President said the country’s stockpile would neither be sold nor
destroyed.
“Selling this in an open market, would only send the wrong message, and
will likely drive demand, and leading to even more poaching,” she said.
“We are in a dilemma...we can’t sell them, we can’t burn them, we are just
going to leave them like as they are to educate the world that this thing
has to stop…the wanton slaughter of elephants genocide has to stop,” she
added.
In fact, according to the documentary, in just five years (2009-2014),
Tanzania lost 85,000 elephants to poachers, which was 60 percent of the
country’s total population. While in the last decade alone, it is estimated
that at least 40 tonnes of Tanzanian ivory have reached the international
black market.
For his part, Mr Aron Msigwa, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism
spokesperson, told The Citizen, “Our stand is still the same. It hasn’t
changed...the stockpile dates a long time back. Our focus is now on
conservation and the fight against poaching, as well as against
human-wildlife conflict.”
Between 2009 to 2013, Tanzania made several attempts to dispose of its
stockpiled ivory worth $80 million (Sh186 billion) and a proposal to
downgrade the elephant’s endangered status, insisting that the stockpile
weighing more than 100 tonnes was from dead or culled animals that were not
poached.
For instance, in 2010, a request by Tanzania and Zambia to hold one-off
sales of their ivory stockpiles was rejected. Both countries had proposed a
relaxation to trade restrictions on their elephant populations by moving
them from Appendix I to Appendix II.
While Appendix I suggests the highest level of protection under the
Convention, banning all international commercial trade, appendix II allows
some regulated international commercial trade.
While Tanzania was asking to sell almost 200,000 pounds of ivory that would
have generated at least $20 million, Zambia wanted to sell 48,000 pounds of
ivory.
Media reports indicate that both countries argued that its elephant
population had reached the point where they were trampling crops and
killing too many people.
They also said preventing them from selling the stocks which come from
natural deaths or controlled culling of problem animals - would increase
anger toward the beasts who are seen increasingly as pests by affected
communities
But on the other hand, in 2012 a fresh bid by Tanzania to be allowed to
sell its stockpiled ivory was turned down. This prompted the country in
2013 decided to abandon its efforts to sell them, a decision which was
commended by many stakeholders, including the African Wildlife Foundation
(AWF).
It is documented that Tanzania is a home to one of the largest
concentrations of African elephants on the continent.
According to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) it is estimated that there are
only 415,000 African elephants compared to 10 million in 1930. However,
their populations have been growing rapidly in southern Africa.
African elephants consist of two subspecies – savanna elephants which roam
plains and the lightly wooded savanna of southern and east Africa, and the
smaller forest elephants, which live in the tropical jungles of west and
central Africa.
Most African elephants are currently included in Appendix I of CITES, which
limits trade in all products derived from the animals.
The elephant populations in Zimbabwe, Botswana, Namibia and South Africa
are included in Appendix II, which is less restrictive, but a special
annotation deems their ivory untradeable.
https://www.thecitizen.co.tz/tanzania/news/national/tanzania-to-use-its-sh186-billion-ivory-stockpile-for-awareness-3831996