A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, May 1, 2016
Kenya burns largest ever ivory stockpile to highlight elephants' fate
Kenyan president lights pyres in move some fear will drive further poaching by taking 5% of global stock out of circulation
More than 100 tonnes of ivory has been set ablaze in Kenya, the largest ever such fire, in an attempt to shock the world into protecting endangered elephants.
Eleven giant pyres of tusks from
around 6,000 elephants, a quantity seven times the size of any previous
burn, were lit by the Kenyan president, Uhuru Kenyatta, at a ceremony
in Nairobi national park on Saturday.
Kenyatta, who was joined by other African leaders and foreign officials,
has demanded a total ban on the ivory trade to protect the future of
wild elephants on the continent. The move has been supported by a range
of conservation groups.
On the bonfire were tusks, ivory sculptures and rhino horn confiscated
by the Kenyan authorities and said to be worth up to $105m (£82m) on the
black market.
Speaking to a large audience before opening the ceremony, Kenyatta said:
“Kenya is making a statement that for us ivory is worthless unless it
is on our elephants. This will send an absolutely clear message that the
trade in ivory must come to an end and our elephants must be protected.
I trust that the world will join us to end the horrible suffering of
our herds and save our elephants for future generations.”
The ceremony was designed to highlight the decline in Africa’s wild
elephant population and the impact of poaching. Each year more than
30,000 elephants are killed for their tusks.
On Friday, Kenyatta said: “The future of the African elephant and rhino
is far from secure so long as demand for their products continues to
exist.” He will press for a ban at an international wildlife trade
meeting in South Africa in September.
The director of the Kenya wildlife service, Kitili Mbathi, told BBC
Radio 4’s Today programme: “The reason is to make a statement to the
world that we are committed to conservation, and to underline the fact
that we don’t believe that there ought to be any value attributed to
ivory and rhino horn but on elephants and rhinos.”
The burn was not universally welcomed, however. Mike Norton-Griffiths,
an environmental economist, told Today : “I am very worried about it. I
think it’s almost reckless of the Kenyans. The problem is it’s a very
large burn of ivory, 5% of the global stocks of ivory, and when you take
5% of stocks out of a market like this, a resource market, something is
going to happen.
“The traders will see 5% less ivory available to be released to them.
Their response will be: ‘They’re taking this seriously, they’re never
going to release this ivory to us, we must go and collect more from
elephants.’”
Campaigners are keen for investment to reduce costs and increase
benefits for conserving elephants, and global efforts to cut the demand
for ivory products.