Kenya Ivory Burn Controversy: Why Botswana Boycotted The Historic Conservation Event
Fire burns part of an estimated 105 tons of ivory and 1.35 tons of
rhino horn confiscated from smugglers and poachers at Kenya's Nairobi
National Park, April 30, 2016.
Photo: Siegfried Modola/Reuters
The Kenyan government set fire to 105 tons of ivory and 1.35
tons of rhino horn in the largest-ever destruction of its kind Saturday
in Nairobi National Park. A number of African leaders, conservation
bigwigs, business moguls and even Hollywood celebrities attended the
star-studded event. Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, who lit the 11
towering pyres, said he intended to send a message that the East African
nation does not tolerate wildlife poaching.
“Ivory belongs to our elephants. There will not be a market in it,” Kenyatta said Saturday, as he called for a complete ban on any form of trade in ivory.While most countries and conservationists praised Kenya’s move, the historic burn was controversial for others. The government of Botswana boycotted it altogether.
“For us, burning an elephant’s tusks is like putting the
final nail in the coffin of a once magnificent animal,” Tshekedi
Khama, Botswana’s environment minister, wrote in a recent op-ed
in Britain’s Independent newspaper. “We believe we should preserve and
protect whatever remains of these creatures as a reminder of how
mankind’s greed leads to the extinction of our planet’s flora and fauna.
We cannot burn the shame associated with this and hope it will
disappear in smoke.”
Kenyan
authorities prepare for the historic burning of 105 tons of elephant
ivory and 1.35 tons of rhino horn at the Nairobi National Park on April
22, 2016.
Photo: Charles Ooro/Kenya Wildlife Service
Representatives from Botswana attended the Giant’s Club Summit in
the central Kenyan town of Nanyuki to address Africa’s elephant-poaching
crisis Friday and Saturday, but explicitly chose not to particiapte
in the ivory burn event that followed. The southern African nation is
home to the continent’s largest elephant population, and government
officials there say the burning of ivory downplays the seriousness of
trading as it sends the message that ivory is worthless.“In Botswana, we do not destroy ivory because we have told communities that there is value in conserving elephants for eco-tourism and emphasizing that the value of a live elephant should be upheld at all costs,” Khama wrote in the op-ed. “Burning ivory would demonstrate to them that the animal has no value. We prefer not to burn elephant tusks or rhino horns or any other wildlife product which can be used to show to the wider world the value of nature and the importance of conservation.”
Students
from Stem International School help Kenyan authorities stack elephant
tusks for the upcoming ivory burn at the Nairobi National Park on April
22, 2016.
Photo: Picture by Charles Ooro/Kenya Wildlife Service
This is not the first time Kenya has destroyed elephant tusks. It
became the first country to ever torch ivory in 1989, when former
President Daniel arap Moi set illegal stocks on fire. Since then, some
African nations have destroyed about 150 tons of ivory. Yet, some 20,000
elephants are still killed each year across the continent.Ivory, of course, does not burn easily. Kenyan wildlife officials had to douse the pyres, which represented 8,500 dead elephants and 343 slaughtered rhinos, in 40,000 liters of fuel to ensure the animal parts disintegrated. The massive flames are expected to burn for the next several days.
Mike Norton-Griffiths, a Nairobi-based consultant on the economics of conservation, said Saturday’s historic burn was “wishful thinking, almost risky behavior” on Kenya’s part.
“We have no evidence that previous burns had any impact on prices or common behavior,” he recently told the Financial Times.
People
look at a life-size ivory elephant sculpture after it was unveiled at
the Sir Seretse Khama International Airport in Gaborone, Botswana, on
July 16, 2015.
Photo: Monirul Bhuiyan/AFP/Getty Images
Others have argued that Kenya should have sold off the illicit
wildlife stockpiles, worth more than $172 million, to raise money for
anti-poaching efforts. But Kenya’s president fiercely disagreed.“For us, ivory is worthless unless it is on an elephant. I will rather wait for the judgement of the future generations who I am sure will appreciate the action we have taken,” Kenyatta said Saturday at the ivory burn.
Rather than destroy the animal parts, Botswana has
used some of its recovered ivory for public artwork to memorialize the
dead mammals and spread awareness. In 2014, the government unveiled a
spectacular elephant sculpture made from ivory at Sir Seretse Khama
International Airport in the capital Gaborone.
“It serves as a reminder to people who pass through this
building each day that conservation of this iconic species is our
collective responsibility,” Khama wrote in the op-ed. “We are saying
that one live elephant is worth so much more than all the art made of
ivory. The statue is a lasting memorial to raise local, national and
global awareness of the devastating impact of illegal ivory and the
determination of Botswana and the global community to put an end to it.”
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