A major conference in London is considering how
to protect Africa's wildlife, including rhinos and elephants, from an
unprecedented surge in illegal trafficking. Conservationists warn that
the growth in the illegal ivory trade means elephants could be wiped out
in parts of Africa in the next few years. As demand from China pushes
levels of poaching and smuggling to new highs, we investigate China's
illegal ivory traders.
In a nondescript shopping mall in Beijing sellers offering
antiques and artworks are crammed together. The shops are piled high
with stone carvings, jade and ivory. Some have whole elephant tusks on
display, others ivory figures, statues and intricately worked scenes.
As soon as we enter one shop with cabinet after cabinet of
carvings, the owner gets tense and defensive. "We have a licence. We
have a legal licence to sell ivory. It's hanging there," he says
pointing to the wall.
China has around 150 legal, government-licensed ivory shops.
This is one of them. They are the only places allowed to sell ivory to
individual buyers. The government says ivory carving is an ancient art
it wants to keep alive.
Chinese consumers, increasingly wealthy, desire ivory. Some
think it is lucky, while for some it is a way to display their status.
Others see it as a good investment and many give ivory as a gift or
bribe to win favour with an official or business contact. It is
certainly good business.
"I've been in this business more than 40 years. I don't get
involved in anything illegal," says the shopkeeper. When we ask why he's
so worried, he says: "There are illegal shops. But it's a case of 'one
rotten egg spoiling the whole soup'."
China's government was given permission to import one
consignment of more than 60 tonnes of ivory from Africa six years ago.
Pieces carved from that legal stockpile can be sold in China as long as
they have a driving-licence-sized photo identification.
But when we look closely at the pictures on the photo IDs in
the shop we are in, the images do not quite match the carvings on sale.
When we ask about the discrepancy the shopkeeper tells us it is time to
leave.
"It's just a matter of the angle the picture is taken from.
You shouldn't make a fuss about it," he says, adding: "I'm off. I'm
closing now. I told you. It's an angle problem."
It is a common scam. Reusing old IDs to sell new pieces of
ivory can be a way of laundering ivory that is not from the legal
stockpile but illegal, smuggled into China.
Cracking down
Last month Chinese customs officers destroyed six tonnes of
seized ivory. It was a signal that China is trying to tackle the
problem.
Watching the event, John Scanlon, secretary general of the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (Cites), the
body regulating the international trade in endangered species, told
reporters Africa's elephants were increasingly threatened.
"In 2011, we had 25,000 elephants illegally killed on the
African continent. Last year, it was 22,000. So that was almost 50,000
elephants illegally killed for their ivory in just two years. This is
decimating the African elephant population and we will soon see local
extinctions in some areas, in particular within Central Africa."
To evade the current crackdown China's ivory traders are moving
online. Selling ivory on the internet is illegal and major websites
have banned it. But on sites specialising in auctions, antiques and
collectables it is easy to find dozens of photos of ivory pieces for
sale.
We made contact with one trader. He met us in a Beijing hotel.
"People I know who specialise in this trade are already in jail. This business is banned in China," he said.
"We have a new police chief in Beijing. They have started to monitor it very strictly."
He told us it was getting harder to import and move ivory.
Taking it on trains or even the subway was impossible as all bags had to
go through airport-style security. Sending it by courier was risky too,
he said, and even ivory being moved in bags on public buses had been
seized.
Rising prices
Once he was convinced we were genuine buyers he produced a large tusk.
He said it was smuggled ivory, 57cm (22 inches) long,
weighing 2.7kg (6 pounds), the asking price 77,000 Chinese yuan
($12,700; £7,600).
The trader insisted this was some of the best quality ivory
available, taken from an elephant not long after it had been killed, and
carved with mythical figures.
"Here on top there's a phoenix, here a dragon," he said.
"There are different types of ivory, white, yellow and blood ivory. This
is close to blood ivory. It's the best."
And, he added, the crackdowns themselves are pushing up the
price of ivory, making it even more attractive to investors and more
profitable for sellers.
"There are lots of ivory collectors. But there's less and
less ivory available. So the price is shooting up every day," our seller
told us.
He left with his tusk and has since been in contact, apparently keen to make a sale.
Demand from China is a major factor in the surge in poaching and smuggling.
Some believe the answer is a total ban on ivory sales. China does not want that.
But while the buying goes on, so does the killing, pushing elephants in parts of Africa towards extinction.
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