Thailand faces trade ban over ivory

Global regulator CITES has given Thailand until August 2015 to take action against the illegal ivory market or the country could face a trade ban.

A boy walks on a chalk drawing of an elephant

A boy walks on a chalk drawing of an elephant designed by artist Remko van Schaik at the Wat That Thong temple in Bangkok. (AFP)

Thailand may face an international wildlife trade ban unless it reins in its illegal ivory sector, which is a magnet for traffickers, global regulator CITES says.

"There have been years without any real action on the ground when it comes to controlling the illegal ivory market, be it illegal imports or trade within Thailand," said Oeystein Stoerkersen, chairman of CITES' governing body.

The Geneva-based Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora has set Thailand an August 2015 deadline to fall into line.

Bangkok is under additional pressure to report back by next January on the steps it has taken to bolster recent laws that CITES claims are insufficient.

"Unless there is a positive outcome of strengthening of legislation... then Thailand will face a ban, and a suspension of all trade no matter what commodity it is, of the 35,000 species listed with CITES," Stoerkersen told reporters.

Among the species on the CITES watch-list are orchids and various species of exotic wood, both of which are significant export products for Thailand.

"I think that is a strong signal to send to a country," said Stoerkersen.

The decision came as delegates wrapped up a week-long CITES conference in Geneva covering a host of issues related to the trade in endangered species.

Ivory has long been a key concern.

Earlier this week, CITES chief John Scanlon told AFP that elephants would be wiped out in some parts of Africa unless more countries got involved in efforts to prevent poaching and ivory smuggling.


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