Carnage in Cameroon

in International Wildlife Trade on February 24, 2012

I am shocked (somewhat) and saddened (greatly) by breaking news of an elephant massacre in Cameroon, Central Africa, where at least 480 elephants have been killed in recent weeks in Boubou Ndjida National Park, a park official told Agence France-Presse on Thursday.
[teaserbreak]
The reason I am not more surprised is I have seen this kind of poaching perpetrated countless times since I began campaigning for elephant protection a quarter-century ago. The magnitude of this slaughter, however, is on a scale not often seen.

It is the ivory killing fields all over again. Clearly these criminals will stop at nothing to get hold of elephant ivory because they know there is a thriving black market for it. I would not be at all surprised if China is the intended end destination for this bloody ivory.

In 2008, China and Japan were permitted to purchase 102 English tons of ivory annually — a move recklessly sanctioned by governments across the world who naively (or disingenuously) contended the sale would meet the demand and stop the killing. They played Russian roulette with the lives of elephants. Their gamble did not pay off.

Unless all legal ivory trade is stopped, and the black market is strangled, these massacres will continue. China and Japan must have their status as legal ivory trading partners revoked immediately. Otherwise, future generations will find themselves living in a very sterile world, with animals such as elephants and rhinoceroses surviving only in tiny, heavily fortified pockets. The forests and savannahs will be devoid of life.

Born Free USA campaigns vigorously against the reprehensible ivory trade and for the welfare of elephants. Learn six things you easily can do to help by visiting our elephants page.

Blogging off,
Will

Read the next article

SB 245 Raises the State’s Coyote Bounty [2012]