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Kenya's mega ivory piles 'will burn even if it snows'
By Nicolas DELAUNAY
Nairobi (AFP) April 29, 2016


Kenya holds summit to stop elephant slaughter
Nanyuki, Kenya (AFP) April 29, 2016 - From anti-poaching commandos deployed by helicopter to boosting court prosecutions: Kenya on Friday hosted a summit on how to end ivory trafficking and prevent the extinction of elephants in the wild.

Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta is heading the meeting which groups African heads of state and conservationists in the central town of Nanyuki to boost awareness of the threat of poaching.

On Saturday, the country sets fire to nearly its entire ivory stockpile.

The bonfire will be the largest-ever torching of ivory, involving 105 tonnes from thousands of dead elephants, dwarfing by seven times any stockpile burned before.

Africa is home to between 450,000 to 500,000 elephants, but more than 30,000 are killed every year on the continent to satisfy demand for ivory in Asia, where raw tusks sell for around $1,000 (800 euros) a kilo (2.2 pounds).

The summit aims to raise global awareness and eventually achieve a total ban on ivory trade, while highlighting the multiple methods used in the fight against poachers, from the frontline, where rangers are out on patrol, to the court room.

- Military-style patrols -

The day long talks aim to examine "how we can expand these efforts across the continent," said Max Graham, head of the Space for Giants conservation group, which helped organise the meeting.

In Kenya, the combined efforts of government and private game reserves have helped cut poaching, with the number of elephants killed in 2015 down to 93 from 164 the previous year.

In the Ol Pejeta private reserve near Nanyuki, a rapid response team of armed rangers who travel by helicopter has been hard at work since 2011.

Equipped with night vision gear, encrypted radio communications, guns and sniffer dogs, and trained by British ex-special forces, the teams have helped slash poaching.

Although the military-style approach is effective, it costs up to $2 million a year.

Kenya is also trying to boost prosecution efforts, with five major cases against traffickers currently in court in the port city of Mombasa -- a key point on the smuggling route to Asia, according to Space for Giants' legal expert Shamini Janyanathan.

But in a country plagued by corruption, the conviction of key figures involved in poaching and smuggling remains rare.

- 'Poaching wave' -

The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) banned the ivory trade in 1989.

China, which has tightened its laws on ivory imports, allows the resale of ivory bought before the 1989 ban, but activists say the trade in legal ivory acts as a cover for illegal imports and call for a complete ban on sales.

Graham notes that anti-poaching efforts is only one part of the response, and that cutting the demand is the "ultimate solution."

In the meantime, protecting elephants means they wont be wiped out before the demand can be stopped.

"The challenge is we don't know how long it's going to take for that demand to drop off. Is it one year, is it five years? So what we need in the interim is a holding position," Graham said.

"It means once this poaching wave has passed, once the demand for ivory and rhine horn has passed, we still have reservoirs for these magnificent animals".

Eleven towering piles of ivory rise above the savannah grasslands of Nairobi National Park, ready to be burned Saturday in a symbolic grand gesture against the trade threatening elephants with extinction.

It will be the largest ever burn of ivory, with the 105 tonnes, representing thousands of dead elephants, seven times larger than any destroyed before.

This is no simple bonfire -- but there is one fundamental problem.

"Ivory doesn't burn," said Robin Hollister, the pyrotechnic expert responsible for the fires. "If you try to burn it with a match or by throwing it into a fire, it won't ignite."

A short distance away, thousands of litres of a mixture of diesel and kerosene lie in a tank, waiting to be injected with pressurised air though steel pipes buried in the ground leading into the heart of the pyramids.

Hollister has helped organise all the cremations staged by Kenya since the first burn in 1989.

A former engineer who then worked creating special effects for films, he was recruited by the famous palaeoanthropologist Richard Leakey, head of the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS).

- Firestarter -

Chucking the ivory onto a normal wood fire simply won't work, he said.

"The exterior will be charred, but the inside will remain intact," Hollister noted, adding that the same applies to the rhino horns, which form a twelfth pyramid of 1.35 tonnes from over 340 rhinos.

"If you wish to incinerate it, you have to take it to extreme temperatures."

It is a grand statement. On the black market, that quantity of ivory could sell for over $100 million (88 million euros), and the rhino horn could raise as much as $80 million (70 million euros).

Rhino horn can fetch as much as $60,000 per kilogram (2.2 pounds), more than gold or cocaine.

Incineration would be easier in an oven, but that wouldn't make the same impact visually, and the whole point is to send a message to stop the illegal trade in tusks.

Instead, organisers have had to calculate how to burn ivory piled high in the open air in a national park -- surrounded by dignitaries -- and ready to be filmed and photographed by the media.

"It's a show after all, the burning has to be symbolic," said Hollister. "There'll be ivory towers, nice flames, it will be very visual."

In total, 16,000 tusks have been piled vertically on metal pyramid frames some three metres high (10 feet) to hold the ivory in place.

When Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta approaches the largest of the pyramids, he will insert a flaming torch into the pyre.

Once the president walks safely away, the fuel will be injected under pressure in the heart of the pile through a perforated steel tube, and the flames will take hold.

The same process will be repeated for the other pyramids, due to be lit by heads of state and other guests.

Ashfaq Mughal, another engineer preparing the burn site, said they will be able to control the fire by regulating the fuel to feed it.

- 'Even if it snows' -

"We can control the pressure, so we will be able to adapt the heat if necessary," Mughal said. "During the tests, the metal structure bent."

To help the process, tens of tonnes of illegally cut precious sandalwood seized from smugglers have also been placed at the base of the pyramids.

"It is clear that if we wanted to be more efficient, we would do it differently," Hollister added.

"For example, we would not put the tusks vertically as you see them there, we would pile them on top of each other."

Even with all the fuel and planning the fire is expected to burn for days.

"I have no idea how long exactly the burning will take, but I think it will take a few days," he said.

Recent days have seen Nairobi swamped by torrential rainstorms, but Hollister smiled when asked if he feared it could put out the flames.

"It may be a hassle for guests, and will perhaps slow down the process, but I can assure you it will burn and it will be very hot," said he. "The ivory doesn't need to be dry because it doesn't ignite, and it doesn't absorb the water either."

Richard Leakey, passing by the pyres to oversee preparations, added his support, joking: "It will burn, even if it snows!"


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Previous Report
AFRICA NEWS
Kenya readies to torch tusks in bid to stamp out ivory trade
Nanyuki, Kenya (AFP) April 28, 2016
Thousands of elephant tusks are being piled high into pyres as Kenya prepares to torch its vast ivory stockpile hoping to stop trafficking and prevent extinction of elephants in the wild. Time is running out: at current rates of elephant killing, conservationists warn large herds of elephants will be wiped out within decades from all but the most protected of parks. Following a regional ... read more


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