Elephant killing in Tanzania brings scrutiny on murky international agreement

S
stenews
Wed, Jul 10, 2024 8:50 AM

Elephant killing in Tanzania brings scrutiny on murky international
agreement
The Wildlife Society
July 9, 2024

Hunting had been effectively banned for decades before recent months

Conservation groups and pro-hunting interests are clashing over the killing
of elephants in northern Tanzania, just south of a Kenyan national park.
Amboseli National Park is a popular wildlife viewing destination for
tourists, and the area south of the Tanzanian border that it straddles has
been relatively safe for elephants in recent decades. But since September
2023, at least five male African bush elephants (Loxodonta Africana) have
been killed just south of the border in Tanzania—possibly by trophy
hunters. While a tacit agreement has been in place between Tanzania and
Kenya for some time to protect elephants near the border, official details
on the pact are murky. In the mid-1990s, a similar string of killings
caused public outcry, prompting Tanzania to place a nine-month moratorium
on hunting in the area adjacent to the Kenyan national park. But it’s
unclear if any further agreement ever emerged between the two countries.
Some conservationists believe hunting should be banned, while safari groups
maintain that hunting can bring a net benefit to local communities affected
by conflict with elephants, which in turn helps conservation.

https://wildlife.org/elephant-killing-in-tanzania-brings-scrutiny-on-murky-international-agreement/

Elephant killing in Tanzania brings scrutiny on murky international agreement The Wildlife Society July 9, 2024 Hunting had been effectively banned for decades before recent months Conservation groups and pro-hunting interests are clashing over the killing of elephants in northern Tanzania, just south of a Kenyan national park. Amboseli National Park is a popular wildlife viewing destination for tourists, and the area south of the Tanzanian border that it straddles has been relatively safe for elephants in recent decades. But since September 2023, at least five male African bush elephants (Loxodonta Africana) have been killed just south of the border in Tanzania—possibly by trophy hunters. While a tacit agreement has been in place between Tanzania and Kenya for some time to protect elephants near the border, official details on the pact are murky. In the mid-1990s, a similar string of killings caused public outcry, prompting Tanzania to place a nine-month moratorium on hunting in the area adjacent to the Kenyan national park. But it’s unclear if any further agreement ever emerged between the two countries. Some conservationists believe hunting should be banned, while safari groups maintain that hunting can bring a net benefit to local communities affected by conflict with elephants, which in turn helps conservation. https://wildlife.org/elephant-killing-in-tanzania-brings-scrutiny-on-murky-international-agreement/