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Save Elephants and Shut Down China's Ivory Pipeline
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Sponsor: The Rainforest Site
Call on China to stem the surging demand for illegal ivory that is fueling the slaughter of Africa's remaining elephants.
After facing decimation in the 1980s, a global ban on ivory sales has barely saved Africa’s elephants from extinction.
When the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) agreed to unleash stockpiles of ivory in a “one-off” sale to China1, the decision kicked off a surge in demand for the coveted “white gold.” Rather than reduce the need for black-market ivory and the poaching that supplies it, China’s growing middle class wants more.
And they are willing to pay for it.
Soaring prices encourage more poaching and attract the attention of armed rebel groups, corrupt government officials, and international criminal organizations. Five of the world’s least stable nations, are home to rampant poaching, with many of the biggest, most horrific elephant killings traced back to Sudan, now home to more foreign-born poacher-terrorists than elephants2.
Park rangers are often the only forces going up against the killers. Outnumbered and ill equipped, they’re manning the front line in a violent battle. Meanwhile, profits from these violent conflicts fund other illegal activities elsewhere in the world3.
Park rangers are often the only forces going up against the killers. Outnumbered and ill equipped, they’re manning the front line in a violent battle. Meanwhile, profits from these violent conflicts fund other illegal activities elsewhere in the world3.
In Mozambique, years of poaching and war have accelerated evolution, leading to more than half of the female elephant population unable to grow tusks4.
In 2013, about 400 tons of ivory was trafficked out of Africa, the tusks of 50,000 elephants. The price of ivory in China has since sky-rocketed from $6 a kilo in 1976 to $3000 today, much more than most Africans earn in a year4.
Help us reverse this bloody path towards extinction. Sign the petition below and fight poaching by calling on the Chinese Ambassador to the United States to cooperate with international authorities in targeting illegal elephant poaching and smuggling.