It is the year 2042 where eleven year old
Ruth is sitting in her father’s study, watching her father, Jim, with great
interest preparing his work assignment for the next day. Ruth quizzically with
a stare of interrogation says to her father, “Daddy, what does and African
Elephant look like?” Jim with poignant eyes
looks intently at his daughter and enquires as to the reason of such a
question.
She says, “We are learning about animals
that have ceased to exist such as the Mauritian Dodo bird and the African
Elephant”. Jim immediately touches the ‘instanet’ screen; the 2042 3D
technological adaptation of the internet where all images exhibit in
holographic format. Mouths out aloud the words, “African Elephant” magically;
captivatingly and miraculously a morphed hologram of the African Elephant
appears directly in the center of Jim’s study.
Jim stares absorbedly at his daughter then
back to the elephant hologram and says sorrowfully, “It is so sad because of
human greed, corruption, inducement and authoritarian short sightedness, this
is the only way you will ever see an African Elephant!!! By hologram!!! As this
incredible animal does not exist anymore and never will they ever roam the
African Plains, African Forestation and African Bush as in the great herds of 2012?
The AFRICAN ELEPHANT IS GONE AND GONE
FOREVER”?
Inquiringly Ruth asks, “Why, what happened
to the African Elephant”? Jim inquisitively runs his hand over the hologram
format and answers, “It all started in the year 1990 when a world organization
called CITES announced that a global Elephant
ivory ban would be imposed, and no one would be allowed to trade in ivory”.
Ruth interrupts, “what is ivory and what is CITES”? Jim answers without any
reflection or hesitation, “All animals with teeth have ivory, which is composed of a
creamy white substance called dentin that makes up the bulk of teeth. However,
some animals have particularly large teeth or tusks that lend themselves to
harvesting, such as elephants, hippopotami, and whales.
Ivory
from these animals had been used for centuries in decorative art, religious art
fax, religious statuettes and icons and in the manufacture of objects such as
piano keys and billiard balls. Concerns about declining populations of
elephants in particular had led to restrictions through CITES on the global
trade, and many honest and decent craftspeople started to seek out alternatives
such as high quality plastics or tagua, also known
as vegetable ivory.
The
term ‘ivory’ has been used in English for almost 1,000 years; the word
"elephant" has its origins in the Greek ἐλέφας, meaning ‘ivory’ or
‘elephant’. This suggests that elephants have been the primary source of ivory
throughout history.” Jim added.”CITES was the then
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and
Flora, and was also an international agreement between governments. Its aim was
to ensure that international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants did
not threaten their survival.
CITES worked by subjecting international trade in specimens of
selected species to certain controls. All import, export, re-exports and
introduction from the sea of species covered by the Convention had to be
authorized through a licensing system. Each Party to the Convention had to
designate one or more Management Authorities in charge of administering that
licensing system and one or more Scientific Authorities to advise them on the
effects of trade on the status of the species, i.e. the trade in ivory related
to the future existence of the elephant.
In 1989, after ten years during which
at least one elephant died every ten minutes, President George H. W. Bush
unilaterally banned ivory imports into the US, Kenya in support burned its 13
tons of ivory stocks, and CITES
announced the advent of the global ivory ban, which began in 1990.
Sadly, not all countries agreed or
approved the ban. Zimbabwe, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia, and Malawi entered
“reservations,” exempting them from the ban on the grounds that their elephant
populations were healthy enough to support trade.
By listening to the illogical and irrational ramblings and urgings
of the then Zimbabwean President Robert
Mugabe enunciating that elephants took up a
so much space and drank huge amounts of water. The elephants by default would
have to pay for their room and board in Zimbabwe with their ivory.
Zimbabwe, Botswana, and Namibia then
made CITES an offer: They would
honor the ivory ban if they were allowed to sell ivory from elephants that had
been culled or had died of natural causes.
CITES agreed to a compromise,
authorizing a one-time-only “experimental sale” by the three countries to a
single purchaser, Japan.
In 1999 fifty five tons of ivory was
sold to Japan.
Through their narrow sighted thinking
and inability of any long term planning, by CITES agreeing to this inimitable
experimental sale of ivory had without question become the major protagonist
leading to the beginning of the death knell of the elephant as man knew it in
2012. For a science based organization and so-called protectors of wild fauna
and flora, CITES has single handedly opened the back door for the wholesale
unlawful slaying of the elephant.
CITES officials refused to issue formal estimate of the elephants
killed, slaughter or eradicated per annum, reports of international NGOs, whose
undercover investigators surreptitiously exposed an increase in illegal ivory
trade after the Japan sale. Since CITES
had problems calculating and quantifying the amount and assessment of elephant
poaching, by rights and decree should have declared the Japan experiment
inconclusive, full of loopholes or even a failure.
This is just what China needed to
promote ivory trade a conclusive or categorical failure by CITES, giving China
the vehicle to manipulate CITES. In a 2002 report China warned CITES that a main reason for China’s
growing ivory-smuggling problem was the Japan experiment: China purposely
misled the Chinese people into believing the international trade in ivory has
been resumed. Chinese consumers thought it was acceptable and legitimate to buy
ivory again.
This crisis mushroomed and was expanded by
China’s nouveaux rich, or bao fa hu
(the ‘suddenly wealthy’). The main consumers being middle-aged men showing that
they had made it into China’s new middle class and were eager to flaunt or show
off their ability in making expensive limitless purchases. Magnificent ivory
carvings were traditional symbols of wealth and status.
In July 2008 CITES endorsed and sanctioned China’s request to procure ivory,
a decision supported by Traffic and WWF. Member countries agreed, and that fall
Botswana, Namibia, South Africa, and Zimbabwe held ivory tusk auctions where
they jointly sold more than 118 tons of ivory to Chinese and Japanese traders
this represented over 10,000 dead elephants.
After the immeasurable elephanticide of the
1970s and 1980s, Africa’s elephant population was reduced from an estimated 1.3
million to some 690,000 in 2012. From the plains of the African continent to
the bush veldt, in 37 range states, starting in Mali to South Africa, Ethiopia
to Gabon, elephants were slaughtered at the rate of more than 100 a day, in
excess of 36,500 a year, ivory was smuggled to Asia, mainly China.
This inexcusable situation had to be
blamed on CITES whose clouded, appalling and foolish judgment was made, lacking
the data to evaluate the impact of its first ivory sale. CITES blindly endorsed
this second sale, which set off the starters gun initiating the absolute demise
of the African Elephant. This decision by CITES stimulated and enthused the then
growing illegal or blood ivory market. Through decisions made by certain
incompetents, we now are in the year 2042, where sadly the only African
Elephant to be seen is through the holograms of the ‘instanet’”.
Eleven year old Ruth looks at her father in absolute disbelief and says,
“What happened to CITES”? Jim slowly stands up as though ready to leave his
study, and remarks, “Because of incompetence, ineptitude and lack
of ability, CITES is a name that every now and then appears in the history
‘instanet’ but is long gone as an organization, and the association that has
replaced CITES has made sure due to historical animal tragedies, the protection
of our wild fauna and flora will always remain in place and the genocide that
wiped out the African Elephant population will never be repeated”.