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Ivory is
displayed before being crushed during a public event in Dongguan
in south
China's Guangdong province on January 6, 2014 (AFP)
|
Beijing —
China crushed a pile of ivory reportedly weighing over six tonnes on Monday, in
a landmark event aimed at shedding its image as a global hub for the illegal
trade in African elephant tusks.
Clouds of
dust emerged as masked workers fed tusks into crushing machines in what was
described as the first ever public destruction of ivory in China.
The event
in the southern city of Dongguan was "the country's latest effort to
discourage illegal ivory trade, protect wildlife and raise public
awareness", the official news agency Xinhua said.
Surging
demand for ivory in Asia is behind an ever-mounting death toll of African
elephants, conservationists say, as authorities have failed to rein in
international smuggling networks.
Experts
believe that most illegal ivory is headed to China -- where products made from
the material have long been seen as status symbols -- with some estimating the
country accounts for as much as 70 percent of global demand.
Chinese
forestry and customs officials oversaw the destruction, which was shown live by
state broadcaster CCTV. It reported that the ivory weighed 6.1 tonnes and had
been seized over a period of years.
"With
measures like this we can still save elephants from being driven towards
extinction," said Iain Douglas-Hamilton, founder of London-based
conservation group Save The Elephants.
Some of the
crushed ivory powder would be disposed of and some displayed in a museum
exhibit, while the rest would be "preserved", state-run China
National Radio reported.
The powder
can be used as an ingredient in traditional Chinese medicine.
China was
in March named by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species
(CITES) as one of eight nations failing to do enough to tackle the illegal
trade in elephant ivory.
CITES
banned international ivory trading in 1989, but the environmental group WWF
estimates that around 22,000 elephants were hunted for their tusks in 2012,
with a greater number projected for the following year. There could be
as few as 470,000 left, it says.
Other
countries have carried out similar exercises, with the US crushing six tons of
ivory in November. The Philippines destroyed five tonnes of tusks in June, and
Kenya set fire to a pile weighing the same amount in 2011.
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