NEW ANALYSIS POINTS TO IVORY
ENFORCEMENT FAILURES IN PARTS OF AFRICA, ASIA


Environmental Panorama
International
March of 2010


Posted on 17 March 2010
Doha, Qatar – Urgent law enforcement action by governments in Central and West Africa and South-east Asia is crucial to addressing the illicit ivory trade, according to a new analysis of elephant trade data.

Detailed regional summaries of the data held in the Elephant Trade Information System (ETIS), the world’s largest database on ivory seizures, highlight the failure of law enforcement in key elephant range States facing an increasing threat from organised crime and the presence of unregulated markets.

The re-analysis comes as 175 governments meet in Qatar for the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species in Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), where they will consider ivory trade issues.

"It's clearer than ever that governance shortfalls and weak enforcement allow illicit ivory trade to go unchecked in West and Central Africa and in South-East Asia, where large domestic ivory markets openly sell ivory illegally," said Tom Milliken of TRAFFIC, who undertook the ETIS analysis.

"What's needed is urgent action by government enforcement agencies in these regions and strong collaboration with counterparts in Asia where many of the current seizures are being made."

“If there was adequate political will, a commitment to law enforcement would shut down the illegal markets and check corruption. That isn’t happening.” Milliken said.

ETIS is compiled by TRAFFIC on behalf of CITES, and comprises more than 15,400 ivory seizure cases compiled over the last 21 years.

The re-analysis of the data was made by region rather than by country, and was carried out to align the data with MIKE (Monitoring the Illegal Killing of Elephants), another of the CITES tools used to monitor poaching, which also shows that the Central African region is losing the most elephants.

"Until this strengthened law enforcement happens, ivory will continue to leak out of Africa” said Elisabeth McLellan, Species Manager, WWF International.

"We're not talking small-time smugglers here, we're talking hardened, organized criminal gangs," McLellan said.

+ More

International development finance agendas at risk of clashing

Posted on 16 March 2010
New York – The world’s nations needed to quickly agree on principles that would avoid different international development finance agendas coming into conflict, WWF warned today.

WWF welcomed a report released by UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon today aimed at achieving lagging Millennium Development Goals on the original schedule of 2015, but said there was a risk MDGs and other current development agendas would not be achieved unless each had adequate and quarantined funding.

Also on the international agenda is securing the funding mechanisms for climate adaptation for least developed countries and the low carbon development support promised under the Copenhagen Accord, with the UN Secretary General recently announcing a High Level Advisory Group on climate financing.

“The danger when we have two parallel processes essentially related to development funding is that governments will start to pick and choose priorities and merge funding streams for less overall development funding,” said Kim Carstensen, WWF climate initiative leader.

“The world’s poorest people are due the commitments made to them at the opening of the new millennium and they also are due the world’s assistance in coping with climate change impacts they had almost no role in causing and having a chance to develop without contributing to climate catastrophe.”

WWF is calling for agreements and commitments that Copenhagen Accord related funding be additional to commitments under overseas development aid commitments, including meeting the MDG objectives.

“The MDGs are behind schedule largely because developed countries made funding commitments they did not keep,” said Carstensen. “There are lessons there, both for an accelerated effort to achieve the MDGs on the original schedule and to achieve the funding commitments made under the Copenhagen Accord.”

“Where we should be finding the synergies between the two development agendas is not in mixing up and depleting the funding streams but in emphasising the common objectives.”

“Successful climate adaptation works towards several MDG goals in protecting productive landscapes and marine environments, reducing health risks, achieving food security and empowering women in their communities.”

Keeping the Promise, the new UN outline for achieving the MDGs, breaks new ground by identifying climate change as an issue that will hold back their achievement.

The report also notes that “achieving the MDGs should also contribute to the capacities needed to tackle climate change.”

“We couldn’t agree more,” Carstensen said.

About WWF
WWF is one of the world's largest and most respected independent conservation organizations, with almost 5 million supporters and a global network active in over 100 countries. WWF's mission is to stop the degradation of the earth's natural environment and to build a future in which humans live in harmony with nature, by conserving the world's biological diversity, ensuring that the use of renewable natural resources is sustainable, and promoting the reduction of pollution and wasteful consumption.

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Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
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