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Will Zimbabwe Win Their Battle to Sell Their Ivory Stockpile?

Press Room by Press Room
in Special Feature
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Will Zimbabwe Win Their Battle to Sell Their Ivory Stockpile?
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Zimbabwe has serious economic challenges. With their surplus of elephant tusks – could their sale help the struggling nation recover or simply fuel the conservation efforts against ivory trade? Zimbabwe has demanded the right to sell its stockpile of ivory to raise money for conservation, wildlife authorities said on Tuesday, joining other southern African nations in calling for the global ban on the trade in tusks to be relaxed.

Wildlife authorities in the cash-strapped nation estimate the country’s decades-old hoard of ivory is worth around $300 million, which they say would help plug funding gaps for game reserves.

The proposal has put it on a collision course with the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), which prohibits the sale of ivory to curb poaching.

Southern African nations like Zimbabwe, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia have a growing number of elephants. “Our decision to sell ivory is not an emotional one. It is a scientific one backed by facts. At independence in 1980 we had 40 000 elephants and the number has more than doubled and yet the land is not expanding,” Spokesperson for Zimbabwe’s wildlife authority, Tinashe Farawo said.

Zimbabwe has an elephant population of around 84 000 which is nearly double what it can cope with, according to the parks and wildlife authority.

But over the past decade, the population of elephants across Africa has fallen by about 111 000 to 415 000, largely due to poaching for ivory, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

A month ago, Zimbabwe sold 100 elephants to China and Dubai in an effort to raise cash. The deal was worth USD$2.7 million over six years according to wildlife authorities.

Farawo called on critics of the ivory sale proposal to “give us money to run our operations,” instead of criticizing it.

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Wildlife authorities said if approved, it would help them fund operations, buy radios and vehicles for patrols to curb poaching.

“CITES was meant to regulate trade in endangered species but if there is no trade then CITES is not serving its purpose,” Farawo said.

Last month Botswana, which has the largest elephant population in Africa, sparked controversy by lifting its five-year ban on elephant hunting citing “high levels of human-elephant conflict”.

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