Stakeholders in wildlife conservation are looking to see the government of Tanzania to impose a total ban of tourist hunting for elephant products and auctioning of ivory stockpile as a permanent solution to save the African jumbos.
Leading environmental protection campaigner and a businessman in Tanzania Reginald Mengi told participants of the ongoing special conference on elephant protection in Tanzania that a total ban of tourist hunting for elephant products would help to minimize poaching of African jumbos.
He said tourist hunting for elephant trophies in Tanzania has been corrupted by a section of hunting companies through poaching of elephants in open areas outside protected wildlife parks.Mengi told the conference on Friday that the ongoing debate on whether Tanzania should auction its 120 tons of ivory stockpile will fuel poaching in case the government of Tanzania decides to sale by auction the ivory lot.
Tanzania has a reserve of 120 tons of elephant tusks stocked in a wildlife store in Dar es Salaam.The two-day elephant conservation conference has been organized by the Tanzania government in collaboration with the International Conservation Caucus Foundation (ICCF) of the United States of America and the United Nations Development Program.
This conference is taking place in Tanzania’s capital city of Dar es Salaam and had attracted national and international stakeholders in conservation of wildlife.Poaching has escalated at an alarming rate in Africa during the past 20 years, threatening disappearance of African jumbos, increased in recent years.
