During the conference, chaired by Foreign Secretary William Hague and
attended by the Prince of Wales, the Duke of Cambridge and Prince
Harry, world leaders from over forty nations vowed to help save iconic
species from the brink of extinction.
The London Declaration contains commitments for practical steps to
end the illegal trade in rhino horn, tiger parts and elephant tusks that
fuels criminal activity worth over $19 billion each year. The trade
also undermines economic opportunity in developing countries, and
threatens the survival of entire species.
Key states, including Botswana, Chad, China, Gabon, Ethiopia,
Indonesia, Tanzania, and Vietnam, alongside the United States and
Russia, have signed up to actions that will help eradicate the demand
for wildlife products, strengthen law enforcement, and support the
development of sustainable livelihoods for communities affected by
wildlife crime.
These include:
Support for continuing the existing international ban on commercial trade in elephant ivory.
Renouncing the use of products within governments from species threatened with extinction.
Amending legislation to make poaching and wildlife trafficking
“serious crimes” under the terms of the UN Convention against
Transnational Organized Crime.
Strengthening cross-border co-ordination and support for regional wildlife law enforcement networks.
Further analysis to better understand the links between wildlife
crime and other organised crime and corruption, and to explore links to
terrorism.
The conference heard first-hand from the Presidents of Botswana,
Chad, Gabon and Tanzania, and the Foreign Minister of Ethiopia, who
announced the proposal of an Elephant Protection Initiative to secure
new funding from private and public sources for the implementation of
the African Elephant Action Plan.
The plan includes commitment to an extended moratorium on ivory
sales, as well as plans to put ivory stocks beyond economic use. The UK
Government announced it would provide support to help the Initiative get
up and running.
Botswana has now announced that it will host a further Conference in
early 2015 to review progress against the commitments made in the London
Declaration.
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