China’s complete ban on ivory trade went into effect yesterday, officials said, a major step forward in Beijing’s efforts to rein in what was once the world’s largest market for illegal ivory.
“From today ... the buying and selling of elephant ivory and goods by any market, shop or vendor is against the law,” the Chinese State Forestry Administration said on its official account on Weibo. “From now on, if a merchant tells you ‘this is a state-approved ivory dealer’ ... he is duping you and knowingly violating the law.”
The agency added that the ban also applied to online sales and souvenirs purchased abroad.
According to the Xinhua state news agency, a partial ban had already resulted in an 80 percent decline in seizures of ivory entering China. Domestic prices for raw ivory are down 65 percent, it said.
The total domestic ban was announced at the end of 2016.
By March last year, 67 factories and shops involved in China’s ivory trade had closed, Xinhua reported.
The remaining 105 were expected to close yesterday.
China had previously banned imports of all ivory and ivory products acquired before 1975, after pressure to restrict a trade that sees thousands of elephants slaughtered every year.
African ivory is highly sought after in China, where it is seen as a status symbol, and used to fetch as much as US$1,100 per kilogram.
Poaching in Africa has seen the elephant population fall by 110,000 over the last 10 years to 415,000, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
Despite an overall fall in poaching, Africa’s elephant population has declined in part because of continued illegal killing, said a report this year by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.
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