2011 Annus horribilis for African Elephants, says TRAFFIC
MEDIA RELEASE For immediate release
2011: Annus horribilis for African
Elephants, says
TRAFFIC
Cambridge, UK, 29th December 2011—As the year draws to a close, TRAFFIC warns that 2011 has seen a record number of large ivory seizures globally, reflecting the sharp rise in illegal ivory trade underway since 2007.
Although
official confirmation of the volume of ivory involved in
some cases has not yet been registered, what is clear is the
dramatic increase in the number of large-scale seizures,
over 800 kg in weight, that have taken place in 2011—at
least 13 of them.
This compares to six large seizures
in 2010, whose total weight was just under 10 tonnes. A
conservative estimate of the weight of ivory seized in the
13 largest seizures in 2011 puts the figure at more than 23
tonnes, a figure that probably represents some 2,500
elephants, possibly more.
The most recent case to
come to light was of 727 ivory pieces discovered on 21st
December concealed inside a container at the port of
Mombasa, Kenya, and destined for Asia.
Over the last
12 months, most large seizures of illicit ivory from Africa
have originated from either Kenyan or Tanzanian ports.
“In 23 years of compiling ivory seizure data for
ETIS, this is the worst year ever for large ivory
seizures—2011 has truly been a horrible year for
elephants,” said Tom Milliken, TRAFFIC’s Elephant
expert.
Milliken manages ETIS (the Elephant Trade
Information System), the illegal ivory trade monitoring
system that TRAFFIC runs on behalf of Parties to CITES (the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of
Wild Fauna and Flora). ETIS holds the details of over 17,000
reported ivory and other elephant product seizures that have
taken place anywhere in the world since 1989.
Once
the records of hundreds of smaller ivory seizures are at
hand, 2011 could well prove be the worst year ever for
elephants in the database.
“The escalating large
ivory quantities involved in 2011 reflect both a rising
demand in Asia and the increasing sophistication of the
criminal gangs behind the trafficking. Most illegal
shipments of African elephant ivory end up in either China
or Thailand.”
The smugglers also appear to have
shifted away from using air to sea freight: in early 2011,
three of the large scale ivory seizures were at airports,
but later in the year most were found in sea freight.
“The only common denominator in the trafficking is
that the ivory departs Africa and arrives in Asia, but the
routes are constantly changing, presumably reflecting where
the smugglers gamble on being their best chance of eluding
detection.”
In six of the large seizures in 2011,
Malaysia has been a transit country in the supply chain, a
role that TRAFFIC first drew attention to in 2009.
A
typical example occurred earlier this month, when Customs in
Malaysia seized 1.4 tonnes of ivory (widely misreported as
15 tonnes) concealed inside a shipping container en route
from Kenya to Cambodia.
Once inside Asia, the
documentation accompanying an onward shipment is changed to
make it appear as a local re-export, helping to conceal its
origin from Africa.
“That’s an indication of the
level of sophistication enforcement officers are up against
in trying to outwit the criminal masterminds behind this
insidious trade,” said Milliken.
“As most
large-scale ivory seizures fail to result in any arrests, I
fear the criminals are
winning.”
ENDS