China sees sharp decline in ivory smuggling in 2016

Read Time:   |  28th February 2017


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In encouraging news, the State Forestry Administration has announced that the amount of smuggled ivory tracked down in China fell 80 percent in 2016 from previous peak years. 

Liu Dongsheng, deputy head of the SFA, made the remarks at the opening ceremony of a wildlife protection campaign, without specifying detailed numbers.

This comes after the news that China will stop commercial processing and sales of ivory by the end of this year, after imposing a three-year ban on ivory imports in an escalated fight against illegal trading of wild animals and plants.

The number of illegal wildlife trade cases has been on the decline since last year, said Liu.

Photo: Baidu Tieba


Meanwhile, the numbers of critically endangered species in China, including giant pandas, crested ibis, Yangtze alligators and Tibetan antelopes, have been increasing steadily, he said.

China’s newly-revised law on wild animal protection took effect at the start of this year, imposing harsher punishment on overkilling and illegal utilisation of wild animals.

Source: Manila Bulliten. 

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