Despite all the brouhaha about Zimbabwe exporting baby elephants, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), the world body that sets the rules for trade in live animals, says Harare has done nothing wrong. The exports are legal. And there is nothing CITES can do about it. “There’s no authority under the convention and international law to stop this trade. The rules put in place by the parties under the convention provide that the Zimbabwe population of African elephants is under Appendix II. There’s no international court you can go to to seek an injunction to stop an individual trade transaction. The secretariat has no authority to intervene. The philosophy that underpins the convention is: international cooperation and national action,” CITES secretary general John Scanlon told the National Geographic. Zimbabwe intends to export elephants to the United Arab Emirates. Tourism Minister Walter Mzembi argues that Zimbabwe has more than 80 000 elephants but only has a capacity for 42 000 elephants. Conservationists say it has only 22 000 elephants.
(210 VIEWS)
The gazetting into law of the payment of quarterly taxes on a 50-50 basis in…
Zimbabwe has today unveiled a ZiG276.4 billion budget for 2025 during which it expects the…
Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa has repeatedly stated that he is not going to contest a…
The Zimbabwe Gold fell against the United States dollar for five consecutive days from Monday…
An Indian think tank has described Starlink, a satellite internet service provider which recently entered…
Zimbabwe’s new currency, the Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG), firmed against the United States dollars for 10…