Network for Animals Founder Brian Davies has joined David Attenborough, Joanna Lumley, Ricky Gervais and animal organisations around the world, undersigning an open letter to China's president Xi Jinping, urging him to act now to save African elephants from extinction, ahead of Prince Willam’s visit next month.
The prince is due to make a statement on conservation on 4 March in Yunnan province, and will visit a sanctuary for Asian elephants. Conservationists expect him to talk about the wildlife trade, including ivory. In a speech last December he noted the street price of ivory in China had increased from $5 (£3.20) to $2,100 per kg in 25 years and was being reflected in increases in poaching:
“Those who look the other way [on the wildlife trade], or spend the illicit proceeds of these crimes, must be held to account”
Network for Animals are actively lobbying to achieve positive change for Elephants at the 2016 CITES convention and are pleased to be taking this united stance against China's Ivory trade, which is a major threat to elephant survival. The text of the letter follows:
Dear President Xi Jinping,
We write to you today on behalf of global citizens to ask for your help in saving the elephants of Africa.
First, we would like to congratulate you on your leadership of one of the world’s most influential and powerful nations, a position which gives you and China the capacity to shape the future in ways that most other countries are not able to do. Because of this global position, the international community looks increasingly to China for leadership in many areas, including combating wildlife trafficking.
As you know, Africa’s wildlife is in crisis, with the number of elephants lost to poaching higher than ever before, and with many other species being poached and trafficked in ever-escalating and unsustainable numbers. Recent scientific reports have determined that 100,000 elephants were killed over 3 years between 2010 and 2012, and it may be significantly higher than that. Best estimates suggest that fewer than 400,000 elephants survive in Africa. This is nothing short of catastrophic.
Many countries play a part in this tragedy. However, according to the United Nations CITES (Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora), most of the poached ivory finds its way to China, where the demand for ivory has soared in recent years, as China’s growing middle-class citizens become increasingly affluent and seek to acquire ‘high-status’ items. Unless urgent actions are taken by the international community, and China in particular, to stop this demand, the killing of elephants will continue unabated and could lead to their extinction in much of their range areas within a short time – possibly as little as 10 years.
So there is very little time left for these remarkable creatures who share so many traits with our own species – a great intelligence, a deep emotional capacity, a long period of nurturing and educating their young, innate deference to their elders, and intense grieving when they lose a member of their family or herd. Furthermore, elephants are a keystone species upon which many other animal and plant species depend, fulfilling a vital role in the ecological balance of the environments in which they are found.
Now the world is looking to you, Mr. President, and to your great country, to take action to end all ivory trade in China – to stop using elephant tusks in the carving factories (and move to alternative production such as stone or synthetic materials that are environmentally and ethically acceptable), to outlaw the buying and selling of ivory, and to educate your citizens about the true deadly cost of ivory.
This is a decision that is in your hands and not one that needs the approval of bodies such as CITES, which allows individual nations to enact stricter domestic measures as they see fit.
You have already shown yourself to be an extraordinary and forward-thinking leader. In advancing the Chinese Dream 中国梦,you lead a country that has achieved astonishing progress in the past 30 years, the result of your people’s capacity to embrace new ideas and actions that modify – and remove where necessary – old and outdated ways of thinking.
Ivory products are a luxury commodity that encourages extravagant consumption, socially irresponsible spending, and illegal practices, all of which run counter to your fiscally responsible and anti-corruption policies. The buying and trading of ivory surely belongs in the past, not in a modern and progressive China.
China is now in the forefront of humanity’s march into the 21st century, and it will earn international respect and appreciation if it can bring to an end a tradition that is based on the brutal killing of tens of thousands of African elephants each year and the potential demise of a species.
China has a long tradition of compassion and reverence for all forms of life and the natural world, a tradition reflected in the recent introduction of the concept of animal welfare into China’s 1989 Wildlife Protection Law, signaling a major advance in global wild animal protection.
It is no secret how ivory is obtained, and the brutal chain of killing, criminality and violence that characterizes the ivory trade. The illegal ivory trade also exacerbates corruption and weak governance in Africa, and deprives African communities of the natural heritage and sustainable economic development they depend on. If the Chinese people were to know of the terrible suffering of elephants who are butchered for their tusks – often while still alive – and the devastating social and economic impacts inflicted upon the African communities, they would certainly feel anguish and compassion and a desire to bring poaching to an end.
We believe your people, as well as the global community, would welcome your decision to ban a trade that perpetuates so much cruelty and, as a consequence, a negative image of China internationally.
Mr. President, you have been called upon to lead your country at this critical moment in its history – to lead your people into a new age of prosperity and national revitalization, and to show the world China’s true greatness and potential. This greatness can be measured not only by the remarkable economic progress China has made in such a short time, but in the character of its people and in their compassion for the natural world.
Mr. President, we urge and implore you to act decisively to finally end China’s domestic ivory trade (both legal and illegal), and to consider the many ways this will serve China’s long-term political and economic interests. We ask that you make this historic decision as a matter of the utmost urgency and cement your lasting legacy as one of the truly enlightened leaders of our time – a leader whom future generations will speak of with respect, admiration and gratitude.
The elephants of Africa are dying in their tens of thousands every year to provide ivory for misguided consumers in China and elsewhere. Without your help, they will continue to perish and be pushed towards extinction.
The world awaits your decision.
Sincerely,
Denise Dresner
For Action for Elephants UK
http://actionforelephantsuk.org/
And we the undersigned:
Sir David Attenborough
Naturalist and broadcaster
Dr. Richard Leakey
Founder, Kenya Wildlife Service
Former Head of Kenya’s Civil Service and
Secretary to Cabinet in Kenya
Will Travers OBE
President, Born Free Foundation
Virginia McKenna OBE Hon Dr Science
Founder, Born Free Foundation
Adam Roberts
CEO Born Free USA
Ingrid E. Newkirk
Founder, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA)
Rob Brandford
Director, David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust iworry Campaign
Claire Bass
Executive Director, Humane Society International – UK
Charlie Mayhew MBE
Chief Executive, Tusk Trust
Ian Redmond OBE Hon Dr Science
Ambassador, UNEP Convention on Migratory Species
Co-founder ELEFRIENDS with the Born Free Foundation
Jan Creamer
President, Animal Defenders International (ADI)
Allan Thornton OBE
President, Environmental Investigation Agency
Yvette Taylor
International Executive Director, Lawrence Anthony Earth Organization
Paula Kahumbu
Executive Director, Wildlife Direct
Simon Jones
Founder and Chairman, Helping Rhinos
Brian Davies
CEO and Founder, Network For Animals
Alan Knight OBE
CEO, International Animal Rescue
Sport Beattie
Founder and CEO, Game Rangers International
Richard Bonham
Director of Operations, Big Life Foundation
Petter Granli and Dr Joyce Poole
Co-Founders, ElephantVoices
Joe Duckworth
Chief Executive, League Against Cruel Sports
Reute Butler
President, Friends of Conservation
Laurene K. Knowles
Founder and President, Elemotion Foundation
Dominic Dyer
CEO, Badger Trust
Policy Advisor, Care for the Wild
Philip Mansbridge
UK Director, International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW)
Elaine Toland
Director, Animal Protection Agency
Elizabeth Chitwood
President and Founder, Elephantopia
Eleanor Harvie
General Manager, Conservation Lower Zambezi
Jonathan Vaughan
General Manager, Lilongwe Wildlife Trust
Kate Moore
Programmes Manager, Lilongwe Wildlife Trust
Salisha Chandra
Founding member, KUAPO (Kenyans United Against Poaching)
Stephanie Hilborne OBE
Chief Executive, The Wildlife Trusts
Sundari SitaRam
Executive Director, Heart of Ganesh
Noor Santosian
Founder, Africa Nomads Conservation
Edwin Wiek
Founder and Director, Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand
Janet Thomas
Founder and Chairperson, Animal Aid Abroad Inc.
Dr Dan Lyons
CEO, Centre for Animals and Social Justice
Geert Drieman
Wildlife Friends International, The Netherlands
Professor Lord May of Oxford OM, AC, Kt, FRS
Department of Zoology, University of Oxford
James Littlewood
Director, Natural History Society of Northumbria
Stanley Johnson
Former MEP, author and conservationist
Nicky Campbell
TV and radio presenter
Bill Oddie
Broadcaster and conservationist
Gary Hills
Director, Fox in Parliament
Carla Geyser
Founder, Blue Sky Society Trust
Max and Josh Kauderer
Founders, Elephant Highway
Ciaran Mundy and Dominic Neate
Trustees, One World Wildlife
Joanna Lumley OBE
Ricky Gervais
Writer and comedian
Steve Backshall
Naturalist and writer
Bishop of St Albans
Members of UK Parliament:
Sir David Amess
MP, Southend West
Catherine Bearder
MEP, South East England
Richard Benyon
MP, Newbury
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at DEFRA 2010-2013
Clive Betts
MP, Sheffield South East
Ben Bradshaw
MP, Exeter
Russell Brown
MP, Dumfries and Galloway
Fiona Bruce
MP, Congleton
Alan Campbell
MP, Tynemouth
Ronnie Campbell
MP, Blyth Valley
Molly Scott Cato
MEP for South West England
Geraint Davies
MP, Swansea West
Mark Durkan
MP, Foyle
Roger Godsiff
MP, Birmingham Hall Green
Zac Goldsmith
MP, Richmond Park
Mike Hancock
MP, Portsmouth South
Martin Horwood
MP, Cheltenham
Glenda Jackson
MP, Hampstead and Kilburn
Lord Judd
House of Lords
Dame Tessa Jowell
MP, Dulwich & West Norwood
Jean Lambert
MEP, London
Baroness (Ruth) Lister of Burtersett
House of Lords
Naomi Long
MP, Belfast East
Tim Loughton
MP, East Worthing and Shoreham
Anne Main
MP, St Albans
John Mann
MP, Bassetlaw
John McDonnell
MP, Hayes and Harlington
Graeme Morrice
MP, Livingston
Greg Mulholland
MP, Leeds North West
Neil Parish
MP, Tiverton and Honiton
John Pugh
MP, Southport
John Randall
MP, Uxbridge and South Ruislip
Andrew Rosindell
MP, Romford
Dame Joan Ruddock
MP, Lewisham Deptford
Adrian Sanders
MP, Torbay
Virendra Sharma
MP, Ealing and Southall
Henry Smith
MP, Crawley
John Spellar
MP, Warley
Lord Stoddart of Swindon
House of Lords
Keith Taylor
MEP, South East Region
Justin Tomlinson
MP, North Swindon
Mike Wood
MP, Batley and Spen