By Adam Cruise
HARARE, Zimbabwe, February 20, 2018 (ENS) – In the last two years, China has imported more than 80 live Asian elephants from across its border in Laos and almost 100 juvenile African elephants from Zimbabwe. They were all destined for zoos throughout China.
According to wildlife investigator and film-maker, Karl Ammann, last year Laotian Prime Minister Thongloun Sisoulith publicly declared the trade in live elephants illegal under national laws.
Furthermore, says Ammann, the transactions should not have been possible under current international regulations outlined by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, CITES, a global regulatory body based in Geneva, Switzerland.
Asian elephants are considered a species threatened with extinction. CITES lists them on Appendix I, meaning that commercial trade in Asian elephants is prohibited unless the elephants are “leased” for non-commercial purposes or they originate from a CITES-approved facility for captive-bred animals.
According to Ammann, Laos does not have a single CITES-approved breeding facility.
African elephants from Zimbabwe are a different, although equally difficult, story. China imported 30 wild caught elephant calves from Zimbabwe in a move that took place on the very day China banned the sale of ivory.
The elephant calves were captured in Zimbabwe’s Hwange National Park on August 8, 2017. They were airfreighted abroad, according to a Zimbabwean government official who asked to remain anonymous for fear of reprisal. The shipment was confirmed by the Zimbabwean Conservation Task Force.
Zimbabwe has sent three known shipments of wild caught elephants to China since 2012. Last year, one of the elephants died during transport.
The CITES Secretariat has now tasked a working group of nations and NGOs to debate the parameters of the live trade in elephants, which exists against a backdrop of poaching that has seen a third of Africa’s elephants wiped out in the past decade.
The working group is being chaired by the United States and includes, among others: Ethiopia; Kenya; China; the hunting lobby group, Safari Club International; Humane Society International; the World Association of Zoos and Aquariums; and the American Association of Zoos and Aquariums.
Zimbabwe’s elephants are listed under CITES Appendix II. This means that trade is allowed, provided the Zimbabwean authorities do not deem it “detrimental to the survival of the species” and that they are “satisfied the animals are legally obtained.”
Zimbabwe alone determines whether the trade is detrimental or whether they are legally obtained. There aren’t any independent checks from the international community or CITES.
There is no mention in the CITES regulations of the welfare or ecological issues that may arise from snatching juvenile elephants from their family herds in the wild.
No Permits
In 2016, China officially imported 50 live elephants from Laos, as stated by the CITES trade database, while Ammann’s undercover interviews with elephant handlers, called mahouts, on the China-Laos border revealed a further 30 went in 2017.
Laos, however, has no record of the corresponding exports.
“The assumption then,” says Ammann, “has to be that a lot of these imports and exports were done without the requisite CITES import and export permits.”
According to a CITES-led investigation last year, “information was made available to the Secretariat suggesting the possible leasing of domesticated Asian elephants to China without CITES documentation.”
Leasing of domestic Asian elephants for non-commercial purposes is authorized by CITES, provided permits for their export and import are provided.
The leases, however, are anything but non-commercial. Ammann discovered that some zoos have paid Chinese middlemen up to 10 times as much as the latter paid owners in Laos.
So-called captive elephants in Laos sell for about R390,000 before being walked across the border into China. There, they are transported to receiving facilities, which buy them from the agents for up to R3,9 million per animal.
“That is a nice mark-up,” Ammann wrote in a previous article, “and makes it exactly the kind of commercial transaction which under CITES rules is not acceptable.”
CITES, however, has been slow to react, and when it has, the reaction has been ineffective. In July 2016, the CITES Secretariat noted “gaps in implementation” and recommended that Laos “improve its compliance ability and law enforcement of illegal wild animal and plant trafficking.”
In July 2017, a CITES Technical Committee visited Laos to investigate the trade in live elephants, among other species. Its findings were presented at the 69th Meeting of the CITES Standing Committee in Geneva in November last year.
The Technical Committee’s report found that the trade in live elephants was indeed illegal, stating, “It is understood that the international movement of some elephants … occurred in contravention of the national legislation of Laos and CITES provisions.”
But, while the Standing Committee called on Laos to improve implementation combating the illegal trade in animals and plants in other areas or face a trade suspension, no such recommendation was made with regards to the trade in live elephants.
China Must be Held Accountable
While Laos and Zimbabwe seem to be getting all the attention, Ammann believes that China also needs to be held accountable, if not more so.
“China has been on the front lines of importing iconic live species from rhinos to killer whales, elephants and recently 150 chimps – all totally illegal. Article VIII of the Convention dictates that parties involved in the illegal import be prosecuted, the animals in question confiscated and, if possible, repatriated. But this does not seem to apply to China,” he says.
Sebastian Korwin, legal and policy advisor for the David Shepherd Wildlife Foundation, says the equity of the CITES decision-making process needs to be called into question.
“There was a serious risk during the Standing Committee meeting,” Korwin said, “that poorly-funded developing countries were unable to fully engage and that important decisions were made by a select few.”
The live elephant trade to China is a particular example of the lack of equity at CITES. Elephants are a popular attraction at Chinese circuses and zoos and in some places they are still expected to perform. Conditions are usually poor, with the elephants often chained and confined in small concrete enclosures.
CITES, though, allows China to determine whether the facility receiving imported elephants is suitably equipped to house and care for them. There is no requirement for outside, independent assessment.
“The double standard at CITES, therefore, benefits the more powerful and well-resourced countries,” says Korwin, “this includes China and not the weaker countries, such as Laos.”
{This report was produced with the support of the Conservation Action Trust, based in South Africa.}