• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Illegal ivory imports flourish in U.S.: report

Tue Jun 5, 2007 1:14pm EDT
Doni Sprague, a Wildlife Repository Specialist, displays a carved elephant ivory tusk at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Wildlife Property Repository in Commerce City, Colorado March 22, 2007. The large quantity of illegal worked ivory entering the United States from China and Japan is a sign of the strong demand that is contributing to an alarming increase in elephant poaching in Africa, a conservation group said on Tuesday. REUTERS/Rick Wilking

By Anna Mudeva

THE HAGUE (Reuters) - The large quantity of illegal worked ivory entering the United States from China and Japan is a sign of the strong demand that is contributing to an alarming increase in elephant poaching in Africa, a conservation group said on Tuesday.

"There is more worked ivory for sale in the U.S. than anywhere else in the world, except for Hong Kong," said Care for the Wild International, which surveyed thousands of retail outlets in 14 U.S. cities last year and this year.

The group presented its findings at The Hague meeting of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), widely credited with stemming the slaughter of the African elephant by imposing a ban on international ivory trade in 1989.

The ivory trade came to a virtual halt after the ban, but has since revived. Experts say the killing of elephants for their tusks, mainly in central Africa, has reached levels not seen since 1989 because of Asian-run crime syndicates.

China, Japan and Thailand, where possessing ivory objects is a matter of prestige, are the most important markets for illicit shipments from Africa, wildlife trade monitor TRAFFIC said in a report last month.

Care for the Wild International, which worked with ivory trade experts Esmond Martin and Daniel Stiles, said illegal worked ivory was imported into the United States by individuals and through the Internet.

The retail outlets surveyed offered 23,741 ivory items for sale, originating mainly in China but also in Japan.

Most of the illegal jewelry, netsukes and human figurines entered the United States mislabeled as antiques, mammoth ivory or bone, whose trade is allowed there, the report said.

Martin told reporters in The Hague that it was very difficult to give an estimate of the size of the illegal ivory trade in the United States or elsewhere.

Care for the Wild International joined other environmental groups in their calls on CITES to reject any proposals at its June 3-15 meeting to loosen the ivory trade.

"If the United States with its financial and technical resources cannot prevent illegal trade, then who can," said Barbara Maas, executive director of the conservation group.

"It's not safe to loosen ivory trade ... Poaching has alarmingly increased. Don't make it any easier," Maas said.

Elephants will trigger a lot of controversy at CITES. African countries are split over protecting the elephant, some saying elephant populations have grown at an unsustainable rate.

Botswana and Namibia want looser conditions on ivory sales from southern African countries, but Kenya and Mali seek a 20-year moratorium on sales from those states to cut poaching.

In 2006 alone, experts estimate as many as 23,000 African elephants were illegally killed.



More from Reuters

Photo

Business spending holds back economic growth

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The economy grew at a much slower pace than previously thought in the third quarter, restrained by weak business investment and a slightly more aggressive liquidation of inventories, data showed on Tuesday.

Guadalupe Hernandez receives an ultrasound by nurse practitioner Gail Brown during a prenatal exam at the Maternity Outreach Mobile in Phoenix, Arizona October 8, 2009. Credit: REUTERS/Joshua Lott

Health reform inches closer

Democrats are on the verge of passing landmark legislation by Christmas, with only one more hurdle remaining.  Full Article | Video 

Photo

The end of the carry trade?

Borrowing the dollar cheaply to fund purchases of higher-yielding assets was a no-brainer in 2009, but will it be a safe bet in 2010?  Full Article