Home | Recommend Us | Contact us | Make NK your default homepage    

Home Astrology Chinese Astrology Numerology Recipes Self Help Photo Gallery Yoga Travel Education Pincodes Baby Names
Top Tamil Movies | Top Tamil Songs | Top Telugu Movies | Top Telugu Songs | Top Malayalam Movies | Top Malayalam Songs

Video News  | Stock Market | Gold/Silver Price | Currency Rate |

  News Channels
 
Kerala News
India News
World News
Business India
Sports News
Cricket News
Travel News
Health News
Technology News
News Reviews
Literature News
Education News
NRI News
Special Features
Entertainment News
Bollywood News
Hollywood News
Malayalam Cinema
Tamil Cinema News
Kannada Cinema
Telugu Cinema News
  Regional News
Andhra Pradesh News
Gujarat News
Karnataka News
Maharashtra News
Punjab News
Tamil Nadu News
West Bengal News
More India News
 
  Top Sections:
India Travel
India Travel
Dance Forms of India
Dance Forms of India
Festivals of India
Festivals of India
Temples of India
Temples of India
Make Up Lessons
Weight Loss Tips
Top World Destinations
World Travelogues
  NEWKERALA.COM News Section:
 

Home > News > commentary

Poaching in India may increase as China opens ivory market

By Sanjeeb Baruah, New Delhi, Aug 8 : Elephant poaching in India may increase as China plans to open its domestic market for limited sale of ivory products after a UN committee gave its consent, experts have said.

The CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna) recently allowed China to import 108 tonnes of elephant ivory from Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe. China is considered the world's largest ivory market.

Conservationists here said it would enthuse the illegal ivory market in China that could lead to increased poaching in India.

Experts say there are just about 26,000 to 30,000 wild elephants in the country. They face multiple threats of poaching, depleting habitat and food scarcity.

The four African countries were allowed to sell a combined 108 tonnes of raw ivory as part of a one-off sale before a nine-year trade ban comes into force.

Ashok Kumar, vice chairman of the NGO Wildlife Trust of India (WTI) said: "The CITES decision is a serious setback to elephant conservation which may trigger renewed poaching for ivory in the country.

"India is more vulnerable, since there are few tuskers (In Asian elephants only the male has tusks). The skewed sex ratio of elephants has been a serious concern already.

"When Japan was allowed to lift ivory stocks from these countries in 1999, we saw an increase in elephant poaching in the country.

"We may witness the same situation in the near future. The real danger is that the small number of tuskers could be wiped out unless we have a plan to counter this," Kumar, a member of the CITES committee on the big cats, told IANS.

According to a WTI estimate, poachers killed at least 220 elephants between 1998 and 1999 in India, whereas in 1997 the number was just about 74.

The UN banned the ivory trade in 1989 after the mass slaughter of elephants in Asia and Africa came to light. However in 1999, the committee revised its position and allowed Namibia and Zimbabwe to sell 34 tonnes of registered ivory stocks to Japan.

These southern African countries saw an increase in elephant population in the last decade. This has been a major source of conflict with humans, who try to protect crops from marauding elephants.

The ivory stocks are from elephants that died of natural causes or were killed in population-management programmes.

Last year, the committee gave Japan the status of a trading partner in the deal, while the decision on China was announced July 15 this year. Both countries had applied to the CITES to obtain the items.

WTI said in one of the biggest seizures in June 2002, Singapore authorities seized six tonnes of ivory, including 532 raw ivory tusks and 40,810 ivory hankos (Japanese name for seals). A Japanese importer reportedly ordered the illegal shipment.

Japan was therefore in violation of its CITES obligations, said Vivek Menon, South Asia director of the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW).

An IFAW survey of Asian ivory markets showed the ivory from Asian elephants was considered superior in Japan for making hankos.

Besides, the difficulty in distinguishing Asian ivory from African would allow traders to target elephants across its range.

Experts observed that the number of seizures and the volume of trade increased manifold after Japan was allowed to buy African ivory.

--- IANS

Post your comment
Subscribe to RSS Feeds


Rating: This article has not been rated yet.

Rate:
 




Special Features:
DJ Bhuvi creating a personal space in music world
Why people eat at fast-food restaurants despite it being unhealthy
Online social media comes alive during Mumbai attacks
Gorakhpur's Sun Temple facing neglect
Unrealistic married life's hopes driving brides to post-nuptial depression
Parents' smoking patterns govern kids' chances of picking up habit
Gurudwara Bangla Sahib hosts exhibition on Sikhism
How to live a happy married life during economic crisis
Snoring may stunt kids' growth
How to prevent and handle bullying

Video News Headlines:

Sky turns into a melange of colors with butterflies
Turban a hit among poll campaigners in Rajasthan
Suzuki launches Hayabusa in New Delhi
India beats England to go 5-0 up in the seven ODI
Hrithik Roshan smooches actress Barbara Mori
Migratory birds flock to Kashmir with the onset of winters
Bed-and-Breakfast scheme instant hit in Chandigarh
Slump hits hard the pig iron industry
Mumbai ‘still not under control’ says CM
Over 100 dead in Mumbai attacks
Characters in Bollywood that took over the actor
Movie based on painter, all set to woo the audience
ASI begins renovation at Fatehpur Sikri
 
RBI bias towards growth says FM
Aggression is paying off, says Srikanth
No need to alter 5-year growth plan: Montek Singh Ahluwalia
Fairy Queens of Bollywood
Lakes dying due to silt deposition in Nainital
Salarjung Museum faces the brunt of pollution
Middle way approach won't yield result: Tibetan Youth
Anand advocates chess in Olympics
Salman Khan won’t promote Himesh?
Sports industry feels the heat of global recession
Farmers take to horse breeding
International seminar promotes martial arts
Hindu blast trail leaves behind dust storm
Maradona fans release music video in Kolkata

India Travel Maps:

Regional Maps of India:  Andhra Pradesh    Bihar    Goa    Gujarat    Haryana    Himachal Pradesh    Karnataka    Kerala    Maharashtra   Punjab    Rajasthan    Sikkim    Tamil Nadu    Uttar Pradesh    West Bengal

City Maps of India:  Ahmadabad    Bangalore    Chennai   Coimbatore    Delhi    Hyderabad & Secunderabad    Kochi    Kolkata    Mumbai   Pondicherry   Pune    Surat

States of India Information:

Andaman Nicobar    Andhra Pradesh    Assam    Bihar    Chandigarh    Chhattisgarh    Dadar Nagar Haveli    Daman Diu    Delhi    Goa    Gujarat    Haryana    Himachal Pradesh    Jammu Kashmir    Jharkhand    Karnataka    Kerala    Lakshadweep    Madhya Pradesh    Maharashtra    Manipur    Meghalaya    Mizoram    Nagaland    Orissa    Pondicherry    Punjab    Rajasthan    Sikkim    Tamil Nadu    Tripura    Uttaranchal    Uttar Pradesh    West Bengal

  Photo News

 

Entertainment Sports Current Affairs
  Best of NewKerala.Com
Self Help Self Help
India Greeting Cards Greeting Cards
India Education India Education
Indian Recipes Recipes
India Travel Maps


 
    Photo Gallery:
Bollywood Photos
South Indian Cinema Photos
Most Visited Pages:
Top Bollywood Movies
Top Bollywood Songs
Top Hollywood Movies
Top Hollywood Songs

Today's TV Schedule:
Hindi TV Channels
Kannada TV Channels
Malayalam TV Channels
Tamil TV Channels
Telugu TV Channels

Today in History

 

 
Home | Recommend Us | Contact us | Make NK your default homepage
© 2001-2008 NEWKERALA.COM. All Rights Reserved.