12 October 2016, 20:12
stradlingABSTRACT OF THE CITES RULING
CITES CoP17 – Africa in a nutshell
Posted on 5 October, 2016 by Simon Espley in Conservation, Events, News
Posted: October 5, 2016
Another CITES Conference of the Parties has concluded, with a mixed bag of results. The sheer volume of press releases and social media commentary can be confusing, even bewildering. And so here is a brief summary of the main decisions that affect African species.
Note:
– CITES appendix I: No legal international trade.
– CITES appendix II: International trade is permitted, subject to issue of export permits by relevant authorities.
Elephants
1. Namibia, Zimbabwe and South Africa requested the legalisation of international trade in ivory.
Request denied.
2. The Elephant Coalition (29 countries) and Botswana requested that elephants in Namibia, South Africa, Botswana and Zimbabwe be up-listed from CITES appendix II to I.
Request denied.
Note that elephants in all other African countries are already on CITES I and that the CITES II listing for the four countries above prohibits international trade in ivory.
In effect the trophy hunting of elephants in those four countries and other countries (where the CITES I classification specifically permits hunting) will continue unaffected, as will the sale of live elephants.
Elephant trophies may be exported, subject to specific bans already in place by target countries, but ivory may not be traded internationally (domestic sales are permissible).
Rhinos
Swaziland requested that they be allowed to trade internationally in white rhino horn.
Request denied
Note that white rhinos are listed on CITES II, with an annotation preventing the trade in rhino horn. South Africa permits domestic trade in rhino horn – although there are ongoing legal proceedings in this regard.
Lions
Several nations requested the up-listing of lions from CITES appendix II to CITES appendix I, which would kill the growing trade in lion bones and other parts.
Request denied, but no wild lion parts may be traded. Lion parts from captive-bred lions can be traded by South Africa, with that country required to set quotas and report to CITES each year.
In effect this decision entrenches and legitimises the lion breeding programmes in South Africa, and opens up possible channels for the laundering of wild lion parts. Trophy hunting of wild and captive-bred lions continues unaffected.
Pangolins
Request to up-list all pangolins from CITES II to CITES 1 was approved
Grey parrots
Request to up-list grey parrots from CITES II to CITES 1 was approved
This means that no grey parrots (wild or captive-bred) can be traded internationally, but there is no restriction on breeders selling captive-bred grey parrots domestically.
Cheetahs
Request to increase protective measures against the exotic pet trade (cheetahs are already on CITES 1) was approved. States agreed to co-operate more fully, and emphasis was placed on a unified approach for social media platforms.
Sharks and rays
Request made to up-list silky sharks, three species of thresher sharks and nine species of mobula rays to CITES appendix II was approved. This means that trade in these species will now have to be proven to be sustainable.
Parting thoughts
Although these changes provide a few more tools to prevent illegal international trade, they are only as effective as the degree to which the law is respected, applied and enforced. Most trafficking of wildlife happens outside of the law, and I am not convinced that any of these changes will have significant positive effects. Some of them might even drive illegal trade deeper underground than it is currently.
There seems to be an enormous void between CITES and those empowered on the ground to implement effective conservation strategies.
What also comes through from social media chatter is a growing sense that CITES is purely an elite United Nations club,
of frustration that foreigners with no understanding of the reality on the ground get to make fundamentally important decisions,
[[[[[[and that it’s time for Africa to be in charge of its own wildlife management decisions]]]]]
12 October 2016, 22:32
Jaco HumanI Fully agree that we in Africa must make our conservation rules. Most 1st world countries do not have a clue what is the realities in Africa. It is very easy for a armchair conservationist to say " If you need meat go to the nearest convenient store". It does not work like that in Africa. We all (hunters) know that the biggest reason for the demise of wildlife is poaching and habitat destruction. Poor Africans do not see the reason to conserve animals if they do not get a benefit out of them.
Why do countries with no interest in Africa have the right to outvote us? RSA is proof that with the correct practices in place we can ensure the future of our wildlife. Sustainable and ethical use is the key to successful conservation.
13 October 2016, 02:34
boarkillerDefinitely gentlemen
Who is US and Europe to tell African Countries what to do, except when they receive from before mentioned countries foreign aid
Tough deal
13 October 2016, 04:19
stradlingThis is a fantasy story—illustrated-- to connect the dots
A democrat== with a world view to wet nurse the weak and afflicted
Needs two things money he / she has no clue how to earn make or save so the power to take it away from the greedy bastard that holds he she and the rest of the world down
Tells stories about conservation== feel good elephant conservation like mother saving the baby’s hot milk== run ngo’s ==give shit away== that is paid for by other people’s tax money ==get votes== get elected== get power == now to keep his friends a job and keep his [I don’t have to work job] he is forced to emotionally save elephants -- and what better way than to make it illegal for the guys with the money to hunt ivory in Africa – same bastards that tried to expose the bullshit and throw him out of utopia == it’s the Americans doing most of the killing === stop them and you keep your job
Piss on --Africa the elephant’s—conservation-- and all that muck – what’s the mater are you an emotional fool --we stopped the flow of usa money-- snubbed the working man-- kept the job-- brain washed lots of give me a living ---fools –so what if a few Africans suffer a little bit hell they are used to that any way
14 October 2016, 03:08
L. David Keithquote:
Why do countries with no interest in Africa have the right to outvote us? RSA is proof that with the correct practices in place we can ensure the future of our wildlife. Sustainable and ethical use is the key to successful conservation.

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