Saturday, August 31, 2019

UN CHIEF VISITS DR CONGO'S RESTIVE EBOLA-HIT EAST

Our Reporter, Goma DRC

United Nations chief António Guterres and senior members of the UN, have embarked on a three-day visit to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), where civilians are facing insecurity and ongoing health crises, including a year-long Ebola epidemic which has claimed more than 2,000 lives.



Mr. Guterres arrived in the town of Goma, situated in the North Kivu region of the country which is at the centre of the epidemic, on Saturday. There, he was received by Leila Zerrougui, his special representative in the country, and inspected a contingent of UN peacekeepers. The UN chief thanked them for their service and sacrifice, and for putting their lives at risk, in often dangerous conditions, to protect civilians.


Jean-Pierre Lacroix, Under-Secretary-General for Peace Operations, who described the high-level visit as an opportunity to reiterate support for efforts towards peace and stability in the country, joined Mr. Guterres on the trip. He declared that the entire United Nations system, including the UN Mission in DRC, MONUSCO, is fully committed to ending the Ebola epidemic.

Civilians in DRC are also dealing with the deadly effects of other diseases, such as measles and malaria, which both claim more victims than Ebola, reminded Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO). Mr. Tedros, part of the official UN delegation, said that this is why investments in a health system based on primary health care are so important, to address all health needs in a comprehensive way.
UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres arrives in Goma, DR Congo on August 31, 2019. The UN chief has expressed "solidarity" with the region ravaged by violence and an Ebola epidemic.
Speaking in French to local media on Saturday, Mr. Guterres expressed his admiration for the resilience of the citizens of DR Congo, and underlined the solidarity of the United Nations in the fight against terrorism, not only in Congo, but across the whole continent of Africa, and the entire world.
Turning to the "terrible situation” of Ebola, and other major health concerns such as measles, malaria, and cholera, the UN chief promised that the UN stands “side-by-side with the Congolese authorities and the people of the country, in order to do our best to meet all of these challenges.”
During his visit, his first since taking up office as the head of the UN in January 2017, Mr. Guterres will meet senior government officials, actors in the DRC peace process, and the civilian, police and military members of the UN Mission in the country.
Other senior UN officials joining the Secretary-General include the UN Special Envoy for the Great Lakes, Michel Kafondo; Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional Director for Africa; Mike Ryan, Executive-Director of the WHO Health Emergencies Programme; and Ibrahima Socé Fall, WHO Assistant Director-General of Emergency Response.

LEGAL BATTLE TO RECOVER IMPOUNDED TANZANIA'S AIRBUS STARTED

By Our Correspondent, Johannesburg SOUTH AFRICA.

A team of lawyers dispatched by Tanzania government to contest a court order that led to seizure of Air Tanzania Corporation Limited plane has yesterday told the Gauteng court in Johannesburg that the order to impound the plane was wrongly granted.
Tanzania government legal team
"We have shown that the order to seize Air Tanzania's Airbus A220-300 was wrongly granted against the government of Tanzania and that it should be lifted". Said advocate Ngcukaitobi representing Tanzania government.

On his part, the advocate representing Herman Steyn in the case, Roger Wakefield, insisted that Prima facie case exists and that the trial court should determine the merits of the case and prospects of success.

According to Steyn's lawyer, the test for a Prima facie have been satified.

The Air Tanzania aircraft was seized at Oliver Tambo International Airport, following the order granted by the High Court in Johannesburg at the end of last week, after it landed in South Africa during a scheduled flight from Tanzania’s economic capital Dar es Salaam. 

The court order was granted after the Tanzanian government refused to pay a Namibian-born farmer the full $33 million (about R509 million) compensation he is owed after his farm in Tanzania was nationalised decades ago by the Tanzanian government.

The privately-owned bean and seed farm, including equipment, 250 cars and 12 small planes, was seized by the Tanzanian authorities in the 1980s. 

The farmer was subsequently awarded $33 million in compensation in the 1990s. 

However, Tanzani government only paid out $20 million (R308 million) so with interest added there is now an outstanding balance of $16 million (R247 million) and after empty promises by Tanzania to pay the full amount owed the unnamed farmer decided to take further legal action leading to the plane’s seizure.


Friday, August 30, 2019

SOUTH SUDAN REBELS FORM 'LEADERSHIP BODY'

Juba, SOUTH SUDAN
South Sudan rebel groups that are not part of the September 2018 peace deal have formed a three-member "leadership council".

The new body was unveiled this evening during a meeting in the Netherlands.
Emmanuel Ajawin, secretary general of the opposition coalition South Sudan National Democratic Alliance (SSNDA), told Radio Tamazuj: "The leadership council will be led by leaders of SSNDA,  Real SPLM and SSUF/A. The three leaders of the three opposition groups will work together to lead the new body." 
The opposition South Sudan National Democratic Alliance (SSNDA), a coalition of non-signatory groups, is led by NAS leader General Thomas Cirillo.
The new council, made up of three holdout opposition groups, was formed today, according to Ajawin.
The opposition official said the leadership council was tasked to effectively engage the international community on peace issues including lobbying for diplomatic support.
Ajawin added that some components of the new coalition will continue the armed struggle against the South Sudanese government.
“We agreed that the current situation in South Sudan needs political solutions. Our position is that the military solution is not the only way for peace in our country,” he said.
“The possibility of negotiating with the government is there, but we have not yet discussed the issue extensively. We believe that any political problem needs to be solved through political means,” he added.
Ajawin, who also leads a faction of the National Democratic Movement (NDM), said the meeting resolved to form a "strong coalition".
He pointed out that the gathering that lasted for two days in The Hague is a major step toward unifying the opposition that is fighting to oust President Salva Kiir.
Ajawin revealed that Mr Pagan Amum, who formerly served as the ruling SPLM party’s secretary general, has formed a new organisation calling itself Real SPLM.
The meeting was attended by General Thomas Cirillo, Pagan Amum, General Oyai Deng Ajak, Cirino Hiteng, Sunday de John, Emmanuel Ajawin, Thomas Tut and other opposition figures. 

DETAINED TANZANIA JOURNALIST IN NEED OF QUICK MEDICAL ATTENTION

Nairobi, August 30, 2019 -- The Committee to Protect Journalists today expressed concern about reports that detained Tanzanian journalist Erick Kabendera’s health is failing and called for Tanzanian authorities to release him immediately.
Today, a Dar es Salaam magistrate declined a request from Kabendera’s lawyers for prison officials to take the journalist to a local hospital, saying that he was sitting in for the trial magistrate and could not grant such a request, according to news reports and Jebra Kambole, one of Kabendera’s lawyers, who spoke to CPJ via phone. Kambole said Kabendera, a freelance investigative journalist, has had trouble breathing and walking for at least a week.
“Erick Kabendera should not be behind bars, and the reports that he is experiencing health problems in detention are deeply distressing,” said CPJ Sub-Saharan Africa Representative Muthoki Mumo. “Tanzanian authorities have a duty to ensure that Kabendera receives the urgent medical care he needs, but more than that, they should put an end to their contrived legal delays and free Kabendera unconditionally.”
Kambole told CPJ that a prison doctor had seen Kabendera and prescribed him medication, but did not provide lawyers or Kabendera’s family with a diagnosis. The court today adjourned the case against Kabendera until September 12, after the government claimed that it needed more time to carry out investigations, Kambole said.
Men who claimed to be police but refused to show ID arrested Kabendera on July 29, as CPJ reported at the time. Police initially claimed they were investigating his citizenship, but changed track to charge him with economic crimes, for which he cannot qualify for bail.

Thursday, August 29, 2019

VAN DIJK TAKES UEFA PLAYER OF THE YEAR HONOUR

Monaco City, MONACO
Liverpool centre-back Virgil van Dijk won the Uefa Men's Player of the Year award on Thursday, edging out Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo, while Lucy Bronze took the women's prize.

Dutchman Van Dijk starred as Liverpool won their sixth European Cup last season with a 2-0 Champions League final victory over Tottenham in Madrid.
"I need to thank my teammates, without them I would not have achieved what I have achieved," Van Dijk told BT Sport.
"It's been a long road and it's part of my journey. I'm very proud to get this trophy. It's credit to everyone who has helped me."
The 28-year-old is the first defender to win the award since the inaugural edition in 2010-11.
He moved to Liverpool from Southampton in January 2018 for a then-world record fee for a defender of £75 million ($91.4 million), immediately helping them reach that season's Champions League final where they lost to Real Madrid.
But Van Dijk was a key figure as Liverpool won their first major trophy since 2012 last term, while also setting a club-record points tally in finishing second by a point behind Manchester City in the Premier League.
"I wasn't 18 and went straight to the top. I had to work every step of the way," added Van Dijk, who was also part of the Netherlands side who lost the inaugural Nations League final to Ronaldo's Portugal.
Messi and Ronaldo had claimed five of the previous eight awards between them, with Andres Iniesta (2012), Franck Ribery (2013) and Luka Modric (2018) completing the winners' list.
"It's not easy but of course we have a good relationship," said Ronaldo of Messi.
"We have not yet had dinner but it is nice. We push each other and it's good to be part of the history of football."
Ronaldo's first season in Italy after joining Juventus from Real Madrid brought him a Serie A winners' medal, but the Turin giants suffered a shock Champions League quarterfinal loss to Ajax.
"It was a special year," said the 34-year-old.
Full-back Bronze won the Women's Champions League title with Lyon before helping England reach the women's World Cup semifinals.
"We had an amazing season, winning the treble," said Bronze of Lyon's exploits. "I think any of my teammates could have been up here receiving the award today."
The 27-year-old Bronze is the first English player to win either of the Uefa player of the year titles.

UNHCR OPPOSES FORCED RETURN OF BURUNDIAN REFUGEES IN TANZANIA

By Our Correspondent, Kigoma TANZANIA
The United Nations refugee agency is urging the governments of Tanzania and Burundi not to forcibly repatriate Burundian refugees sheltering in Tanzania.

Although security generally has improved in Burundi since violence erupted after the 2015 presidential polls, “conditions in Burundi are not currently conducive to promote returns,” UNHCR said in an e-mailed statement.
“We call upon the governments of both Tanzania and Burundi’s commitment to uphold international obligations and ensure that any returns are voluntary in line with the tripartite agreement signed in March of 2018,” the statement said.
“UNHCR urges States to ensure that no refugee is returned to Burundi against their will, and that measures are taken to make conditions in Burundi more conducive for refugees returns, including confidence building efforts and incentives for those who have chosen to go home.”
Tanzanian authorities said Tuesday they had reached an agreement with Burundi to send all Burundian refugees back home from October 1.
About 400,000 Burundian refugees have sought asylum elsewhere in the region, according to UNHCR. An estimated 200,000 of them are sheltering in Burundi.
Burundi suspended all cooperation with the UN human rights office in the country after a UN-commissioned report accused the Bujumbura government and its supporters of being responsible for crimes against humanity.
Tanzanian authorities have expressed frustration over what they say is the slow pace with which the UN is repatriating refugees back to Burundi. Nearly 75,000 refugees have voluntarily returned to Burundi since December 2017.
Most of the Burundian refugees live in camps in the northwestern region of Kigoma.
“They’re still more refugees who have registered for voluntary repatriation but have not been returned, thus fueling violence in camps,” Brig. Gen. Emmanuel Maganga, Kigoma regional commissioner, told AP on Wednesday.
Tanzania’s government has formed a committee to advise on whether to apply the government’s own procedures or reconsider arrangements by the UNHCR, he said.
Burundi’s government has long insisted the country is now safe for all Burundians.
Yet hundreds still flee Burundi each month, according to UHHCR, which is urging governments in the region to keep borders open. - AP

KAGAME EMPHASIZES PRIVATE SECTOR ROLE IN AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT

By Our reporter, Tokyo JAPAN
Rwandan President, Paul Kagame, yesterday told global leaders gathering in Japan's capital, Tokyo to put the private sector at the heart of strategy for prosperity.  
 African heads of state at the Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD) that went underway on Tuesday in the Japanese city of Yokohama.
He was speaking at the Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD), which he described as a valuable process that represents a spirit of optimism and partnership.
Today, he said, many of TICAD’s innovations have become standard and the forum has continued to evolve in tandem with Africa’s priorities.

"The key change is the importance given to the private sector in this TICAD," he said.

The Head of State cited Rwanda as a critical example for success when private sector development is put at the heart of strategy for prosperity.
This, he said, was done using three types of investment.
Kagame told leaders that Rwanda has made good use of the World Bank’s Doing Business tools to overhaul the business environment, and hence effectively allowing enterprises to thrive.
"We established specialised commercial courts and worked with neighbours for deeper integration to facilitate trade in the East African Community region," he said.
Rwanda also invested in infrastructure and technology, allowing public-private partnership to supply wholesale broadband data to power the digitalisation of the economy, he said.
In addition, the President said, the country has invested in high-quality convention and tourism facilities.
Most importantly, he added, Rwanda invests in people, citing that producing “Made in Rwanda” and “Made in Africa” products required skilled young people who are in good health. 
He gave credit to ABE Initiative—a programme that provides scholarship opportunities for African students to study at Japanese universities—for significantly contributing toward that. 
According to Kagame, on skills development, Rwanda has also expanded technical and vocational training with an emphasis on digital skills, as well as funding support for innovation and entrepreneurship.
Kagame commended Japanese private sector players for their sustained investment in the country, especially in horticulture, agri-business and technology. 
Kagame had earlier in the morning hosted alongside UNICEF Executive Director, Henrietta Fore, a breakfast meeting of African leaders and Champions of Generation Unlimited ahead of TICAD7.
TICAD is billed as a high level policy dialogue between African leaders and Japanese leaders, which takes place every three years.
It is a three-day conference.
Plenary sessions are mainly focusing on accelerating economic transformation and improving the business environment through innovation and private sector engagement.
Other sessions are expected to revolve around deepening sustainable and resilient society and strengthening peace and sustainability.
A public-private business dialogue will also be an important subject towards facilitating direct engagement between Japanese and African governments and private sectors. 
The Global Green Growth Institute will together with the African Development Bank launch results of the joint study on green growth assessment, which covers Rwanda and a few other countries.
The forum will introduce some advancements of African social policies, including women's quota system in Rwanda. 
In the past, President Kagame attended the 5th and 6th editions of TICAD which were held in Japan and Kenya in 2013 and 2016 respectively.


MANY FEARED DEAD AFTER BOAT CAPSIZES OFF LIBYA COAST

Tripoli LIBYA

About 40 people are feared dead or missing after a migrant boat capsized off the coast of Libya, a UN official has said.

Charlie Yaxley, a UN refugee agency spokesman, also said about 60 people may have been rescued.

"Terrible news coming in of potentially large loss of life in a shipwreck off the coast of Libya," he tweeted, yesterday adding that details still remained "sketchy".

"Around 60 people have been rescued and returned to shore. At least 40 people are estimated to be dead or missing."

Libyan coastguard spokesman Ayoub Gassim confirmed at least five bodies - including a child - were recovered near the town of Khoms, about 75 miles (120km) east of the capital Tripoli.

He said the coastguard rescued at least 65 migrants, mostly from Sudan, and that efforts were being made to locate those who were still missing.

An independent support group for those attempting to cross the Mediterranean - Alarm Phone - said up to 100 people were on the boat when it capsized.

It said it received a call from one of those on board who "were in severe distress, crying and shouting, telling us that people had died already".

Mr Yaxley later tweeted: "A rescue operation by local fishermen and the Libyan Coast Guard has been underway since this morning. Amongst the survivors includes people from Sudan, Egypt, Morocco and Tunisia.

"If today's tragic numbers are confirmed, the number of people drowned in the Mediterranean in 2019 will have reached close to 900. UNHCR is calling for urgent increase in search+rescue capacity on the central Med, including lifting of restrictions on NGO boats.

"These tragedies are preventable. Cannot accept large loss of life each month as normal. More rescue capacity is needed inc return of EU State vessels NGOs should be free to save lives at sea. Greater efforts to give people hope so they don't risk these journeys in the 1st place."

Last week, more than 100 people died off the Libyan coast as a boat with about 250 people on board also capsized.

Thousands of people each year have died in the Mediterranean from among the hundreds of thousands trying to cross from North Africa to Europe.

Libya has become a major channel for African migrants and refugees fleeing to Europe following the uprising that toppled Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, with traffickers exploiting the unrest since his death.

Almost 5,400 migrants have been intercepted or rescued at sea by the Libyan coastguard so far this year, according to the UN refugee agency.


Wednesday, August 28, 2019

"RELEASE OUR AIRBUS" - TANZANIA DEMONSTRATORS TOLD SOUTH AFRICA

By Correspondent, Dar es Salaam TANZANIA

A group of demonstrators today marched to the offices of South African High Commission to Tanzania in Dar es Salaam city chanting slogans demanding the release of an Air Tanzania Corporation Ltd., plane that was impounded at Oliver Tambo international airport on Friday August 23.


The demonstrators carried placards demanding South African government intervene and release the impounded plane immediately, other were written ‘We risked, we sacrificed, for your independence – today you feel proud to hold our airbus.’

Details on who exactly called for the demonstrations are still very scanty but police who arrested three people in connection with the demonstration were at hand to maintain law and order.

The Dar es Salaam Special Zone Police Commander, Lazaro Mambosasa, told reporters that the demonstration had no blessings of the police force and the organizer did not gave prior report.

Field Force Unit of Tanzania police warning the demonstrators
He said, “What these the demonstrators are demanding is a matter being resolved legally. We, the police have ordered them to stop what they are doing.”

The aircraft with registration number 5H-TCH was operating on the regularly scheduled TC208 flight to Johannesburg, but did not operate the return leg flight number TC209 to Dar es Salaam.  It was impounded through a Gauteng high court order in Johannesburg.

Lawyer Roger Wakefield who represents a retired farmer, Hermanus Phillipus Steyn, has said the aircraft was impounded because Tanzania's government had not paid his client $33m (£28.8m) it owes in compensation.

He said the money was awarded after Tanzania's government seized lands belonging to the South African farmer.

The lawyer said the only way Tanzania could secure the release of the plane was if it put up security or paid the debt.

Adding that “The plane was impounded in line with South African and international laws allowing for an asset owned by a foreign entity to be attached to a case related to a foreign arbitration award”.

The plane was chosen because there is evidence it is owned directly by the Tanzanian government and its value is commensurate with the amount owed to the farmer, who was born in Namibia, he said. - Africa

Tuesday, August 27, 2019

UGANDA AIRLINE RELAUNCHES ALMOST 20 YEARS AFTER VANISHING

Samson Ntale, Entebbe, UGANDA
After a delay to flights that lasted nearly 20 years, Uganda Airlines has once again taken to the skies above Africa, restoring its status as the country's national carrier.
Commercial services resumed on Tuesday with a flight from Entebbe to Nairobi in neighboring Kenya that the airline hoped will usher in a profitable new era for the formerly debt-ridden brand.
Uganda Airline said its fleet of twin-engined Bombardier CRJ-900 regional jet airliners will soon connect to destinations including Dar-es-Salaam in Tanzania, Mogadishu in Somalia and Juba in South Sudan.
More farther flung places will follow, says Jennifer Bamuturaki, the airline's director of marketing and public affairs. Services to Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Zimbabwe, Ghana, South Africa, and Rwanda are expected to be added from September.
The airline was initially scheduled to resume operations in July but had to gain certification to prove its crews can fly safely to any part of the world.
The revival of the brand, orginally founded by dictator Idi Amin in 1977 but grounded in 2001 amid financial difficulties, is aimed at capitalizing on opportunities in agriculture, minerals, tourism and oil and gas sectors, said Monica Ntege Azuba, Uganda's Minister of Works and Transport.
Recent years have seen growing international interest in Uganda as a vacation destination with travelers drawn by beautiful national parks, beach resorts and wildlife such as rare mountain gorillas.
Increased passenger traffic at the country's Entebbe International Airport will contribute to the country's national economy, Vianney Luggya of the Uganda Civil Aviation Authority said.
Luggya said Entebbe's 1.85 million annual passengers could rise to match the seven million experienced by Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Kenya.
"This is largely attributed to the fact that they have a national airline," he said. "Airports like Jomo Kenyatta International Airport earn a lot of foreign exchange from transit passengers."
Uganda Airlines flew to eight destinations and had a fleet of 15 aircraft at the time of its closure in 2001 when a more than a decade of financial difficulties resulted in its liquidation.
In the same year, an attempt to resurrect the government-owned airline through a private sector initiative was made. But the operation did not last long as a result of limited capital.
To compete with big regional players like Ethiopia Airlines and Kenya Airlines, the relaunched Uganda Airlines is running promotional fares that will run for two months.
Nairobi and Mombasa return tickets cost $278 and $325 respectively. Return tickets to Mogadishu, Somalia, and Juba; South Sudan cost $590 and $225 respectively.
"Passengers have the choice of paying their ticket fares in US dollars or Uganda shillings," said Bamuturaki.


CHINA STRONGLY OPPOSES G7 COUNTRIES' INTERFERING IN HONG KONG AFFAIRS


By Our Correspondent, Biarritz, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, FRANCE

China has today, expressed strong dissatisfaction and resolute opposition to a statement from the Group of Seven (G7) summit that referenced the current Hong Kong affairs.

 The country’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Geng Shuang, made the remarks one day after the group issued a short statement on topics including the Hong Kong affairs.

China has reiterated that Hong Kong affairs are purely China's internal affairs, which brook no interference by any foreign government or organization, Geng said.

Geng pointed out that the violence in Hong Kong over the past two months has seriously influenced Hong Kong's social order, economic activities and its international image. He urged the members of the G7 to stop meddling in Hong Kong affairs.

"We will handle our own affairs", Geng told the reporters.

Regarding the Sino-British Joint Declaration, Geng reiterated that the aim of signing the declaration is to ensure China resumes the exercise of sovereignty over Hong Kong and administers Hong Kong based on the national Constitution and the Basic Law, warning foreign government and organization not to use the declaration as an excuse to interfere in Hong Kong affairs.

Hong Kongers have long lived a freer, more cosmopolitan lifestyle than most Chinese, and prejudice against mainlanders is pervasive. Free speech and an independent press are enshrined in the Basic Law that has governed the city since the handover. They’re proud of their distinct cuisine and language, speaking Cantonese rather than the Mandarin more common in greater China.

But critics fear that China’s encroachment may bring an end to all that. Beijing might use the law to nab opponents and submit them to its notoriously opaque justice system, they say. 

PROPOSAL TO OPEN UP RHINO HORN TRADE REJECTED

By Rachel Fobar, GENEVA
Countries have voted against decreasing protections for southern white rhinos at the 18th Conference of the Parties for CITES, the wildlife trade treaty, underway in Geneva, Switzerland. International trade in rhino parts has been banned since 1977, but at this year’s conference, Eswatini (formerly Swaziland) and Namibia proposed loosening restrictions for their respective countries. The vote still needs to be finalized at the plenary session at the end, when all appendix change proposals passed in committee are officially adopted.

"I was encouraged and relieved to see parties resoundingly reject the proposal calling for legal international trade in rhino horn," says Taylor Tench, a wildlife policy analyst for the Environmental Investigation Agency. "Rhino populations remain under immense pressure from poaching and illegal trade, and legalizing trade in rhino horn would have been disastrous for the world’s remaining rhino populations....Now is simply not the time to weaken protections for rhinos."
Other countries, including Kenya and Nigeria, worry that legalizing the trade would undermine the survival Africa’s wild rhinos.
“Humankind can do without rhino horn,” said a representative from Kenya during the debate. “It is not medicine.”
Thought to be extinct in the late 1800s, the southern white rhino is classified today as near threatened by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), which determines the conservation status of species. There are about 18,000 in protected areas and private game reserves today, almost all in South Africa, according to the IUCN. Black rhinos, which are smaller and have a hooked rather than square lip, are classified as critically endangered, with only about 5,000 remaining. They’re found mostly in Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania, and Kenya.
In 2005, Eswatini allowed the noncommercial trade in live rhinos and hunting trophies but not rhino horn. The country put forward a failed proposal to open the commercial rhino horn trade at the last CITES Conference of the Parties, in 2016. Eswatini’s white rhino population reached 90 in 2015, but following one of the country’s worst droughts in recent history, it had fallen to just 66 by December 2017. This year, the country re-upped a proposal to allow for commercial trade in their rhinos, including horn and parts. In a 25-102 vote by secret ballot, this measure was defeated.
Meanwhile, Namibia proposed that CITES down list its southern white rhinos from Appendix I to Appendix II, with an annotation allowing for trade in live rhinos and export of hunting trophies. Though this move would technically weaken protections, conservationists said it wouldn’t have any significant implications in practice, since Namibia is already allowed non-commercial trade in live rhinos and hunting trophies under the Appendix I listing.
In the proposal, Namibia argued that its population no longer warrants the highest protection under CITES and that the restriction preventing export for “primarily commercial purposes” has held the country back from generating revenue for conservation. From 2008 to 2018, Namibia exported 27 white rhinos to Angola, Cuba, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and South Africa. Namibia’s proposal anticipates creating “access to a far larger market for white rhinos,” especially with its primary trading partner South Africa. The country has nearly a thousand rhinos, and according to the CITES secretariat, the population is “increasing.”
“We are deeply concerned that unjustified trade restriction on the Namibian white rhino population, if not removed, will only deprive Namibia of their required resources to manage its populations effectively,” said a representative from Namibia during the debate.
Nonetheless, says Tench of the EIA, Namibia’s rhinos are at risk from poaching, which has intensified since 2014. The proposal was narrowly rejected in a 39-82 vote.
Hundreds of rhinos are poached every year—an average of about three a day, according to Tench—mostly for their horns. Made of keratin (the same protein that makes up our hair and fingernails), rhino horn is often used as a cure-all in traditional medicine in China, Vietnam, and elsewhere in Asia. Because southern white rhinos are more abundant and live in more open habitat, they’ve borne the brunt of the poaching, Tench says. (Go inside the deadly rhino horn trade.)
Eswatini says it has nearly 730 pounds of stockpiled rhino horn, with a commercial value of $9.9 million. Funds from sales of that rhino horn, it contends in its proposal, would have helped conservation efforts.
“Money is at the very core of the matter,” said a representative from Eswatini during the debate. “If the finance is not available to protect them, rhinos will continue to die.”
Opening the commercial rhino horn trade could have had disastrous implications, Tench says. It could have spawned a parallel illegal market, stimulated new demand for rhino horn, increased poaching, and created an enforcement burden for officials, who would have been tasked with the impossible responsibility of distinguishing legal from illegal rhino horn. “It ultimately could just kick off a new wave of demand that would be met by increased poaching. And Eswatini—it’s not the country that even could hope to supply rhino horn internationally. They have 66 rhinos.”
What’s more, the trade in rhino horn is illegal in China and Vietnam, where demand for rhino horn exists, and leading conservationists to ask: Who would have engaged Eswatini in the rhino horn trade?
Neither China nor Vietnam has declared any intention to legalize the trade, although China flirted with the idea last October, when the government announced that tiger bone and rhino horn could be used legally in medical research or for traditional medicine. Soon after, a senior official announced that China was postponing lifting the ban on rhino and tiger parts, pending further study.
“The suggestion that there’s value in the rhino horn that Eswatini has is kind of false anyway, because they’re projecting that based on a black-market value and an assumption that those legal markets would open up again,” says Matt Collis, director of international policy at the International Fund for Animal Welfare, an animal welfare and conservation non-profit that does works to prevent rhino poaching.
Collis says it’s unclear what Namibia hoped to achieve with its proposal—since under current regulations, non-commercial trade in live rhinos and trophies is already allowed in the country.
So, he says, this could have been a first step toward liberalizing trade in the future, because the proposal would have moved Namibia’s rhinos to Appendix II.
“It’s not necessarily clear what the motivation is, unless it’s for something for the longer term,” Collis says.
Going forward, Collis says conservationists need to help countries who bear the burden of protecting these species find another way to fund their efforts. “It does need a concerted effort from the international community to offer alternative ways of financing,” he says.