S. AFRICA HOLDS HUGE IVORY AUCTION!
South Africa is holding the world's biggest legal sale of ivory for almost 20 years.
The auction in Pretoria of more than 51 tonnes of elephant tusks has been sanctioned by the UN body which oversees trade in endangered species.
Namibia, Botswana and Zimbabwe have all sold off their own ivory stocks over the past two weeks.
The ivory can only be sold to officially approved buyers from China and Japan.
They are not allowed to export the ivory, and the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (Cites) says it will monitor trade to make sure companies are not mixing illegally sourced ivory with the legal shipments.
The BBC's Jonah Fisher went to a large warehouse at a secret location in Kruger National Park in South Africa where the hundreds of elephant tusks were stored.
Some of them were small and stacked on shelves, while others lay on the floor - great curved pieces of ivory - over two metres (6.5ft) long.
The auction in Pretoria of more than 51 tonnes of elephant tusks has been sanctioned by the UN body which oversees trade in endangered species.
Namibia, Botswana and Zimbabwe have all sold off their own ivory stocks over the past two weeks.
The ivory can only be sold to officially approved buyers from China and Japan.
They are not allowed to export the ivory, and the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (Cites) says it will monitor trade to make sure companies are not mixing illegally sourced ivory with the legal shipments.
The BBC's Jonah Fisher went to a large warehouse at a secret location in Kruger National Park in South Africa where the hundreds of elephant tusks were stored.
Some of them were small and stacked on shelves, while others lay on the floor - great curved pieces of ivory - over two metres (6.5ft) long.
APPROVED SALES IN 2008
Botswana: 43.68 tonnes
Namibia: 9.2 tonnes
South Africa: 51,12 tonnes
Zimbabwe: 3.75 tonnes
All of the elephants that the tusks came from either died naturally or were culled as part of a population control programme.
With ivory so far having fetched about $150 (£94) a kilogramme in the earlier sales, South Africa can expect to make about $8m (£5m) from the auction, all of which has to be spent on conservation.
Wanda Mkutshulwa, from South African National Parks, told the BBC that she welcomed the sale.
"We're seeing less and less funds being channelled towards conservation and yet... there is so much work that still needs to be done."
Critics of the auction - such as Kenya - say creating a legal ivory market encourages elephant poaching and makes it easier for illegal tusks to be sold.
However, data collected by the wildlife trade monitoring network Traffic shows that seizures of illegal ivory fell in the years following the last legal sale in 1999, says the BBC's environment correspondent Richard Black.
The ivory trade was banned globally in 1989 because poaching was decimating elephant populations. These sales and the 1999 sale are the only exceptions.
Last month, the internet site eBay banned virtually all products containing ivory after lobbying from animal welfare groups.
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