It is a ritual we have been treated to by every administration since the Nyayo days. The government rolls out part of its stockpile of ivory and the President lights a bonfire for the cameras. The flames are meant to illuminate the state’s commitment to the preservation of our wildlife, to ending the international trade in ivory and other wildlife products and to the fight against poaching.
Uhuru Kenyatta got in on the act on Tuesday when he lit up
15 tonnes of ivory tusks in the Nairobi National Park. It is the largest haul
to receive the presidential baptism of fire. By comparison, Daniel arap Moi
torched 12 tonnes in 1989 while Mwai Kibaki only managed a relatively measly 5
tonnes. Further, “to underline Kenya’s determination to eradicate poaching,” according to the President’s website, the Government will burn the rest of its
contraband ivory stockpile within the year.”
Last year, African elephant populations passed what was
described as a crucial “tipping point”. Essentially, more jumbos are being
killed than are born. As reported
in the Los Angeles Times, according to one study, the continent lost about a
fifth of its elephant population -an estimated 100,000 elephants- between 2010
and 2012. And the share of elephant deaths attributed to poaching has shot up
from 25% a decade ago to 65% today.
The Kenya Wildlife Service claims
the country has lost 466 elephants in the last two years. But in an opinion piece for the Guardian last year, conservationist Dr Paula Kahumbu said
nobody in Kenya believed the KWS numbers. Her own estimate of the number killed
in just the first five months of last year was ten times the official figure. A
2014 census
of elephants and other large mammals in the Tsavo-Mkomazi ecosystem, which
straddles the Kenya-Tanzania border, showed that the population had declined by
12.5 percent or over 1,500 animals.
Any way you cut it, our elephants (and rhinos) are in
crisis. And it is true that this is largely driven by Far-Eastern, and
especially Chinese, demand for wildlife products –a fact any conservationist or
Kenyan government lackey will gladly point out. However, they are less candid
when it comes to the liability of the Kenyan state itself.
In March last year, an investigation
by KTN reporter, Dennis Onsarigo, revealed that the Uhuru administration was
not only aware of the identities of the top 11 poaching kingpins, but was
actively protecting them. A year later,
this fact appears to have only succeeded in eliciting a stunning silence from
the media and the normally vocal conservation community. There have been
neither public demands for the allegations to be further investigated nor for
action to be taken against either these specific individuals or their
protectors.
It mirrors the silence that greeted revelations in late 2013
that “decorative”
pieces of ivory stolen from the offices of the President and First Lady in State
House, Mombasa. According to one report, these included pieces that weighed up to 100 kilograms. And all
this during a period when Margaret Kenyatta was busy launching the “Hands Off
Our Elephants” campaign. Few since have sought to know what ivory was doing in
her and her husband’s official residence and offices. Few appear keen to point
out the hypocrisy of the President’s office being decorated with ivory at the
same time we are seeking shaming others for doing the same. Is it still there? If
so, will it be part of the “contraband” the President has promised to destroy? Predictably,
the government has not seen fit to volunteer this information.
Since the Kenyatta administration took office, and despite
the historical baggage one would expect the name to carry (his mother was
widely believed to be implicated
in poaching during her husband’s tenure), there has been a marked reluctance to
challenge the conduct of the government and its officials in executing their
duty to protect our natural heritage. Apart from a brief bust up when the administration refused to declare poaching a national disaster,
conservationists and the media have largely pursued a strategy of
non-confrontation. But this now seems to be a case of scoring some brownie points but losing the game. It is all fine to rant and rave against the (mostly illegal)
international ivory trade. However, ignoring the fact that the government aids
and abets the slaughter at home undermines any international effort to stamp it
out.
In fact the silence only allows the state to present a false
face to the world and to hide its murderous mischief behind a pile of smoking
tusks. Regardless of the questionable efficacy of burning ivory as a means of destroying it, the administration can always rely on dramatic
pictures to obscure any critical interrogation of its record. It is an effective
and dependable public relations ploy. Unfortunately for our elephants, it is no
substitute for serious policy and action to protect them.
A version of this article was published by Aljazeera.
A version of this article was published by Aljazeera.
Yes, as usual it is the cleft and disconnect between talking the talk and walking the walk - something Kenyatta is expert at.
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