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China destroys illegal ivory stockpile China crushes six tons of ivory
(35 minutes later)
China has destroyed about six tonnes of illegal ivory in its stockpile, in a move wildlife groups say shows growing concern about the black market trade by authorities in the world's biggest market for elephant tusks. China has destroyed several tonnes of confiscated ivory tusks and carvings, just months after the US crushed six tons of seized ivory.
Authorities on Monday displayed a pile of ornaments, carvings and tusks to reporters before feeding them into two crushing machines. Officials in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, pulverised 6.1 tons of confiscated tusks and carvings in an event on Monday attended by representatives from 10 countries including the UK, and elephant states including Kenya, Gabon, and Tanzania.
Forestry and customs officials organised what they said was the country's first large-scale ivory destruction in Dongguan in southern Guangdong province, where much of China's ivory trade is focused. Elephant poaching has reached record levels in recent years, at a peak of 25,000 killings in 2011, followed by 22,000 deaths in 2012. China is the world's biggest market for ivory, where it is often sold as carved into works of art and considered a status symbol.
Conservation groups say China is the world's biggest market for ivory. Conservationists welcomed the move. Patrick Bergin, chief executive of the African Wildlife Foundation, said: "This is a courageous and critical first step by China to elevate the important issue of wildlife trafficking and elephant poaching among its citizens and around the world. The Chinese government is to be commended for taking the issue seriously."
Demand is fuelled by rapid growth in the world's second-biggest economy, which has created a vast middle class with the spending power to buy ivory carvings prized as status symbols. However, some environmentalists say that destroying seized ivory could worsen elephant poaching, by making it more scarce and pushing the price up.
Alastair Morgan, the UK consul general attending the China crush, said Britain supported a global ban on ivory trade and consumption. The international ivory trade has been banned since 1989, though domestic trade is allowed in the US and China.
The US crush in November last year was partly in response to the illegal wildlife trade being elevated into a national security concern as some of the funding proceeds have been going to terrorist groups, and is part of a wider crackdown on the trade by the Obama administration.
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