The Prague Post - Zimbabwe rallies allies to push for legal ivory trade

EUR -
AED 4.167823
AFN 82.246246
ALL 99.225694
AMD 442.72813
ANG 2.045047
AOA 1034.852812
ARS 1291.381673
AUD 1.791143
AWG 2.045309
AZN 1.930437
BAM 1.952388
BBD 2.289179
BDT 137.749235
BGN 1.95086
BHD 0.427667
BIF 3370.738172
BMD 1.134707
BND 1.490109
BOB 7.834445
BRL 6.655846
BSD 1.133708
BTN 97.061779
BWP 15.627823
BYN 3.710382
BYR 22240.251451
BZD 2.277399
CAD 1.576363
CDF 3262.281654
CHF 0.928553
CLF 0.028665
CLP 1099.986944
CNY 8.338346
CNH 8.297611
COP 4892.991484
CRC 570.213405
CUC 1.134707
CUP 30.069728
CVE 110.073094
CZK 25.025946
DJF 201.895339
DKK 7.46721
DOP 68.491495
DZD 150.551771
EGP 57.950832
ERN 17.020601
ETB 150.855986
FJD 2.603809
FKP 0.858335
GBP 0.859069
GEL 3.120159
GGP 0.858335
GHS 17.573208
GIP 0.858335
GMD 81.832516
GNF 9825.820434
GTQ 8.74068
GYD 237.62138
HKD 8.807072
HNL 29.40265
HRK 7.531614
HTG 148.391261
HUF 410.344969
IDR 19078.765475
ILS 4.190619
IMP 0.858335
INR 97.311921
IQD 1486.389832
IRR 47779.253594
ISK 146.089133
JEP 0.858335
JMD 179.60699
JOD 0.80449
JPY 162.073001
KES 147.152463
KGS 99.261391
KHR 4545.665707
KMF 494.595395
KPW 1021.243529
KRW 1619.841171
KWD 0.348147
KYD 0.941042
KZT 588.028879
LAK 24559.468213
LBP 101865.929166
LKR 338.693771
LRD 226.960383
LSL 21.560553
LTL 3.350494
LVL 0.686373
LYD 6.307909
MAD 10.571692
MDL 20.100399
MGA 5206.040942
MKD 61.705645
MMK 2382.59965
MNT 4022.685137
MOP 9.066947
MRU 44.905302
MUR 51.173784
MVR 17.523721
MWK 1968.015695
MXN 22.63796
MYR 5.007145
MZN 72.489653
NAD 21.560553
NGN 1820.824824
NIO 41.755193
NOK 12.023585
NPR 155.772058
NZD 1.922613
OMR 0.436849
PAB 1.134707
PEN 4.246261
PGK 4.632965
PHP 64.361199
PKR 318.382968
PLN 4.314138
PYG 9073.031672
QAR 4.130375
RON 5.004596
RSD 117.822822
RUB 93.649196
RWF 1611.682063
SAR 4.255611
SBD 9.644806
SCR 16.321408
SDG 681.42946
SEK 11.138831
SGD 1.4963
SHP 0.891701
SLE 25.814463
SLL 23794.21386
SOS 647.252486
SRD 41.644978
STD 23486.137865
SVC 9.928912
SYP 14753.45426
SZL 21.560553
THB 38.084872
TJS 12.311023
TMT 3.96997
TND 3.412251
TOP 2.732912
TRY 43.285214
TTD 7.702171
TWD 36.86775
TZS 3048.42673
UAH 46.728196
UGX 4160.143402
USD 1.134707
UYU 48.071508
UZS 14709.411636
VES 88.288656
VND 29331.39463
VUV 139.25084
WST 3.173074
XAF 659.460527
XAG 0.034893
XAU 0.000341
XCD 3.071047
XDR 0.838887
XOF 659.460527
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.432917
ZAR 21.433015
ZMK 10213.722894
ZMW 32.121227
ZWL 365.375097
  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.24

    -0.25%

  • RBGPF

    63.5900

    63.59

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.2400

    9.71

    -2.47%

  • BCC

    -1.1800

    92.69

    -1.27%

  • NGG

    0.5000

    71.48

    +0.7%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    21.92

    +0.18%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    9.38

    -0.21%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    21.78

    -0.09%

  • RIO

    -0.1000

    57.16

    -0.17%

  • BCE

    0.3800

    21.62

    +1.76%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    9.17

    +0.65%

  • RELX

    -0.3100

    51.2

    -0.61%

  • GSK

    -0.3100

    35.37

    -0.88%

  • AZN

    -0.8200

    67.05

    -1.22%

  • BTI

    -0.4900

    41.83

    -1.17%

  • BP

    0.4500

    27.66

    +1.63%

Zimbabwe rallies allies to push for legal ivory trade
Zimbabwe rallies allies to push for legal ivory trade / Photo: Jekesai NJIKIZANA - AFP/File

Zimbabwe rallies allies to push for legal ivory trade

Zimbabwe will this week press a drive to legalise the ivory trade, inviting officials from 15 nations to meet in a national park that's a beacon of success in protecting elephants.

Text size:

Hwange National Park is overflowing with elephants, which now routinely wander outside the boundaries to feed, sometimes running into deadly conflicts with people living in the surrounds.

Zimbabwe and its neighbours in southern Africa have seen their elephant herds thrive in recent years and are now home to about 70 percent of the continent's elephants.

That's a markedly different story than in the rest of Africa, where poaching and habitat loss have seen numbers declining.

Zimbabwe, by contrast, is home to 100,000 elephants -- nearly double the number that conservationists say the country's parks can support.

Elephants require vast areas for feeding. Even Hwange, a park nearly half the size of Belgium, isn't big enough to support its population.

Zimbabwe and other countries with large herds say they're left protecting vast stockpiles of ivory they can't sell to raise funds for either conservation work or to support communities affected by the growing elephant numbers.

"These are pertinent issues that are difficult to address in a balanced manner," Tourism and Environment Minister Mangaliso Ndhlovu said in a statement.

Zimbabwe last week urged European ambassadors to allow a one-off sale of $600 million worth of elephant ivory, kept in a warehouse outside central Harare.

International trade in ivory and elephants has been banned since 1989 under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). One-off sales were allowed in 1999 and 2008, despite fierce opposition.

Countries in southern Africa say the ban prevents them even from supporting each other's conservation efforts, for example, by moving elephants from Zimbabwe to countries that want to repopulate.

The conference brings together countries likely to support a legalisation move, including China and Japan, where ivory is highly prized.

Kenya and Tanzania, which fear legalisation will encourage more poaching, were not invited. But the island nations of Seychelles and Madagascar, which have no elephants, are attending.

- Dangerous signal -

A collection of 50 anti-ivory trade organisations issued a statement warning that opening the ivory market would decimate the African herd, which in some regions is near extinction.

"The conference is sending a dangerous signal to poachers and criminal syndicates that elephants are mere commodities, and that ivory trade could be resumed heightening the threat to the species," they said.

But growing elephant herds pose real dangers to nearby communities.

Zimbabwe says 60 people have been killed by elephants so far this year, compared with 72 in all of last year.

"Governments of elephant range states are faced with social and political pressures on why elephants are prioritised over their own life and livelihoods," Ndhlovu said.

L.Bartos--TPP