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Hong Kong bans ivory trade in 'historic' vote | Hong Kong bans ivory trade in 'historic' vote |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Hong Kong's lawmakers have voted overwhelmingly to ban the trade in ivory, in a move campaigners described as "a lifeline for elephants". | |
A similar ban was brought in across mainland China earlier this year. | A similar ban was brought in across mainland China earlier this year. |
Ivory sales will be phased out gradually in Hong Kong, stopping completely in 2021. | Ivory sales will be phased out gradually in Hong Kong, stopping completely in 2021. |
Prior to the vote, demonstrators gathered outside Hong Kong's legislature with signs reading: "Do you really need ivory chopsticks?" | |
"Shutting down this massive ivory market has thrown a lifeline to elephants," said Bert Wander of the global advocacy group Avaaz. | "Shutting down this massive ivory market has thrown a lifeline to elephants," said Bert Wander of the global advocacy group Avaaz. |
How big is Hong Kong's ivory market? | |
Ivory from animal tusks - mostly those of elephants - has been traded in Hong Kong for more than 150 years. | Ivory from animal tusks - mostly those of elephants - has been traded in Hong Kong for more than 150 years. |
It is considered the world's largest ivory market. | |
WildAid Hong Kong, a conservation group, says the former British colony had a 670-tonne stockpile in 1989, when the global trade was banned. | |
Only ivory dating from before that period is meant to be sold, but campaigners say the legal trade is often a cover for illegal activities. | |
In July 2017, authorities in Hong Kong said they had seized the world's biggest ever haul of ivory tusks - some 7.2 tonnes. | |
More than 90% of those buying ivory in Hong Kong are from the Chinese mainland, which had hitherto been the world's largest importer of elephant tusks. | |
What does a gradual ban mean? | |
The trade in Hong Kong will cease in three stages. | The trade in Hong Kong will cease in three stages. |
First, there will be a ban on hunting trophies and ivory from after 1975, when the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) took effect. | First, there will be a ban on hunting trophies and ivory from after 1975, when the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) took effect. |
Later, ivory obtained before 1975 will also be included. And finally, traders will be obliged to dispose of their stock by 2021. | Later, ivory obtained before 1975 will also be included. And finally, traders will be obliged to dispose of their stock by 2021. |
The penalties for ivory smuggling will also increase considerably. | |
Under the new law, offenders could be fined HK$10m ($1.3m; £1m), double the present amount, or imprisoned for 10 years instead of the current two. | |
How have campaigners reacted? | |
Many conservationists have hailed the ban as a victory. | |
Alex Hofford of WildAid called it "a great moment in the history of elephant conservation". | |
Hong Kong lawmaker Elizabeth Quat said the vote marked a great day for elephants, but that the changes must be enforced effectively. | Hong Kong lawmaker Elizabeth Quat said the vote marked a great day for elephants, but that the changes must be enforced effectively. |
"It's now up to our law enforcement agencies to ensure the ban is properly implemented," she said. | "It's now up to our law enforcement agencies to ensure the ban is properly implemented," she said. |
Some activists feel the timeframe is unnecessarily long, however. They point out that African elephants are still being killed for their tusks in huge numbers. | |
Poaching has seen the population fall by 110,000 over the past decade to just 415,000 animals, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature. |