Tanzania needs to clean up act

Uliza_Bei

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I do not have enough time to narrate the story of Tanzania being incriminated in own ivory business. Let me just give the references then if i have time will be back for discussion.
Loose act particularly in Zanzibar worsen situation. Pile of ivory are being stored but are all really guarded?

The following report is out named: EIA-Vanishing-Point-lo-res1 (attached)
View attachment EIA-Vanishing-Point-lo-res1.pdf

It seems ''vingunge'' are involved too!!!!!


Source:sinosphere

http://sinosphere.blogs.nytimes.com...gal-ivory-purchases-during-africa-visit/?_r=0
 
EIA recommends: to investigative focusing on high-level ivory traffickers and corrupt officials who enable
such trafficking.
Makes anti-corruption and civil oversight measures a
core component in all funding (donors are encouraged!!!)
 
Chinese criminal gangs are conspiring with corrupt Tanzanian officials to traffic vast quantities of ivory, according to an alarming investigation, which finds that the trading is so pervasive it even involves high-level diplomatic visits.
Tanzania has lost half of its elephants in the past five years and two-thirds since 2006, mostly to poaching. This has left the country with an elephant population of just 50,500, making it by far the world's biggest victim in the ivory trade. At the other end of the trade chain, China is the biggest consumer as the rapidly growing middle-class population seeks ivory as a status symbol.
The Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) has found that criminals and top-ranking officials are colluding in the illegal trade in ivory and calls for a "zero-tolerance" approach to the crime.
It reveals how, in December 2013, an official visit by a Chinese naval task force to Tanzania's capital city port of Dar es Salaam spurred a surge in business for ivory traders, with one dealer boosting to EIA investigators of making $50,000 (£31,300) from sales to naval personnel.
During the same visit, a Chinese national was caught trying to enter the port with 81 illegal tusks that he said he intended to deliver to two mid-ranking naval officers from the task force vessels moored in the port, the report said. He was convicted and given a $5.6m fine that he was unable to pay and so was sentenced to 20 years in jail instead. He is currently in detention appealing against the sentence.
Earlier last year, there was a boom in illegal ivory sales during the visit of a large official Chinese delegation to Tanzania and local prices doubled, EIA investigators have found.
"This report shows clearly that without a zero-tolerance approach, the future of Tanzania's elephants and its tourism industry are extremely precarious," said the EIA executive director Mary Rice.
"The ivory trade must be disrupted at all levels of criminality. The entire prosecution chain needs to be systematically restructured, corruption rooted out and all stakeholders, including communities exploited by the criminal syndicates and those on the front lines of enforcement, given unequivocal support," she added.
The EIA recommends, among other things, that the government of Tanzania conduct DNA sampling on all seizures of more than 500kg of ivory made within its territory and inventories and destroys all government-held ivory stocks. It must also create a specialist investigative task force to focus on high-level ivory traffickers and corrupt officials who enable trafficking, the EIA says.
Meanwhile, China must adopt and enforce a full domestic ban on the ivory trade and investigate and prosecute high-level ivory traffickers operating through organised criminal syndicates, it says. EIA's report comes just ahead of a major regional wildlife crime summit in Tanzania.
Source:Corrupt officials and Chinese gangs destroy Tanzania's elephant population - Africa - World - The Independent
 
Trade war between agents of imperialists and CHINA has started in TANZANIA.Anyway the imperialists will fail.After all elephants are ours we can eat them,sell them or do anything with them as imperialists did to their elephants which are no longer there in their countries.
 
Its shocking but who will point a finger to the other as we are both sailing in the same boat!!!!!!!
 
Chinese officials 'on illegal African ivory buying sprees'



By Tom Hancock
2 hours ago

Beijing (AFP) - Chinese diplomatic and military staff went on buying sprees for illegal ivory while on official visits to East Africa, sending prices soaring, an environmental activist group said Thursday.

When Chinese President Xi Jinping visited Tanzania in March 2013, members of his government and business delegation bought so much ivory that local prices doubled to $700 per kilogram, the UK-based Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) said in a report, citing ivory traders in the city of Dar es Salaam.
Tens of thousands of elephants are estimated to be slaughtered in Africa each year to feed rising Asian demand for ivory products, mostly from China, the continent's biggest trading partner.

"When the guest come, the whole delegation, that's then time when the business goes up," the EIA quoted a vendor named Suleiman as saying.

The traders alleged that the buyers took advantage of a lack of security checks for diplomatic visitors to smuggle their purchases back to China on Xi's plane.

Similar sales were made on a previous trip by China's former President Hu Jintao, the report said, adding that Chinese embassy staff have been "major buyers", since at least 2006.
View gallery

There could be as few as 470,000 African elephants, according to the environmental group WWF (AFP Ph …

A Chinese navy visit to Tanzania last year by vessels returning from anti-piracy patrols in the Gulf of Aden "prompted a surge in business for Dar es Salaam-based ivory traders", it said.

A Chinese national named Yu Bo was arrested during the naval visit as he attempted to enter the city's port in a lorry containing 81 elephant tusks -- hidden under wooden carvings -- which he planned to deliver to two mid-ranking Chinese naval officers, the EIA said.

Yu was convicted by a local court in March and sentenced to 20 years in jail, it added.
- Key China ally -

Tanzania, which has large reserves of natural gas, is a key ally of China in East Africa, and its President Jakaya Kikwete reportedly signed deals with the Asian giant worth $1.7 billion while on a visit to Beijing last month.
View gallery

Seized ivory tusks are displayed prior to their destruction by incineration in Hong Kong on May 15, …

Tanzania had about 142,000 elephants when Kikwete took office in 2005, the EIA said, adding that by 2015 the population is likely to have plummeted to about 55,000 as a result of poaching.

Almost all ivory sales were banned in 1989 by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), to which both China and Tanzania are signatories.

Politicians from Tanzania's ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) party and well-connected business people are also involved in the ivory trade, with most demand coming from China, the EIA said.

The EIA report did say that enforcement of the ban on ivory sales had slightly improved last year, with smuggling syndicates growing "more cautious", after Yu's conviction, as well as a high-profile raid.

Police found 706 ivory tusks weighing over 1.8 tonnes at a house in Dar es Salaam last November, along with three Chinese nationals who were detained at the scene after trying to pay a $50,000 bribe, the EIA said.
Meng Xianlin, a Chinese forestry administration official who oversees Beijing's commitments under CITES told AFP that the claims made in the EIA's report were "baloney".

"I have not heard of such a matter," he said, adding: "Do not hype this up."
China often says that it pays "great attention", to the protection of endangered wildlife, and in recent years has carried out several high-profile arrests of smugglers caught in its territory, along with a televised incineration of seized ivory.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei described the report as "groundless" at a regular briefing in Beijing Thursday, adding that China was "strongly dissatisfied" with it.

"We attach importance to the protection of wild animals like elephants," he said.
"Recently, in light of the illegal actions of poaching and smuggling of elephant tusks, the Chinese government enacted a series of laws and regulations."

The environmental group WWF estimated that around 25,000 African elephants were hunted for ivory in 2011, predicting that the toll would rise. There could be as few as 470,000 left, according to the group.

 
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