The European Union has invested $20 million in a new
cross-regional wildlife programme to assist wildlife rich countries in
East, Southern Africa and the Indian Ocean regions to fight poaching and
trafficking of wildlife products.
The deal — signed
between the EU, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), the Convention
on International Trade in Endangered Species(Cites) and the Convention
on Migratory Species (CMS) — will concentrate its activities in the
regions’ protected areas, national transit points, and transboundary
ecosystems.
According to the European Commissioner on
Environment, Maritime Affairs and Fisheries, Karmenu Vella, the
programme is part of the EU Action Plan adopted in 2016 to crack down on
wildlife trafficking and strengthen the EU’s role in the global fight
against these activities.
“East Africa has to face
tremendous challenges linked to poaching and illegal trade. The EU is
showing its commitment to work together with the governments from the
region and the UN institutions so that poaching figures drastically go
down, as they remain much too high today,” Mr Vella said.
Through
its Monitoring the Illegal Killing of Elephants (Mike) programme, Cites
will lead the implementation of the three-level approach by reducing
the illegal killing of wildlife at priority protected areas in
transboundary ecosystems throughout southern and East Africa.
International trafficking
The UNODC will be tasked with reducing the international
trafficking of wildlife products at the national level by strengthening
and expanding their Container Control Programme and improving criminal
justice responses, while the CMS will be responsible for developing and
strengthening governance and management.
“Illegal
killing and trafficking of wildlife now runs into billions of dollars.
To combat it, we need find new ways to work together more effectively,”
said Stefano Dejak, the EU ambassador to Kenya.
“The aim is to build on our various strengths and experiences in protecting wildlife across borders.”
Kenya’s
Environment Cabinet Secretary Judi Wakhungu said the funding by the EU
will strengthen the country’s role against wildlife crime, especially
after the enactment of the 2013 Wildlife Management and Conservation
Act, which stipulates stiff penalties for wildlife crime with a minimum
jail term of 20 years and a fine of $20,000.
Poaching
Illegal
killing for tusks, skins and meat remains the biggest challenge facing
Africa’s wildlife, with a half of the continent’s elephants wiped out
between 1979 and 1989, according to estimates by Save the Elephants.
According
to Cites, the number of African rhinos killed by poachers increased for
the sixth year in a row with at least 1,338 rhinos killed across Africa
in 2015, before dropping by 10.3 per cent in 2016.
Elephant
poaching declined for the fifth straight year in 2016. However, despite
the decline, Cites said the number of African elephants continues to
drop as the number of illegal ivory processing centres has doubled.
The fall in poaching numbers is also attributed to improved efforts by international ivory markets including China and Britain.
In
March, China, the world’s largest ivory importer and trader, closed 67
licenced ivory facilities as part of plans to shut down its domestic
ivory trade by the end of this year.
As at March, the
wholesale price of raw legal ivory in China had dropped by almost two
thirds, from $2,100 per kg in early 2014, to about $730 per kg.
Banned trade
In
October, the UK government bowed to pressure by anti-poaching
campaigners and announced that it would ban the sale of ivory regardless
of age.
Despite the progress, challenges remain, including the prolonged quest for an EU-wide ivory ban.
The
EU, the largest global exporter of legal ivory into international
markets, reported a dramatic rise in raw and worked ivory re-exports in
2014 and 2015, where member states reported exports of 1,258 tusks.
Africa’s
current elephant population stands at between 450,000 and 500,000, with
71 per cent of them hosted in the Southern Africa region, as East
Africa, Central Africa and West Africa host 20 per cent, six per cent
and three per cent of the continental population respectively.
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