Tanzania Bans Export of CITES Trophies

Hank2211

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Just saw this come over the wire from SCI (which is what old timers call email):

"Last week SCI confirmed that Tanzania has suspended the exportation of all CITES listed hunting trophies. It is SCI’s understanding that the Tanzanian Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism has taken this action based on a situation internal to the Tanzanian government."

Absolutely no idea what "a situation internal to the Tanzanian government" means. SCI says they have no idea how long the suspension will last, but the it's not an "anti-hunting" issue. Sure has that effect though.

Glad I'm not hunting in Tanzania this year.
 
Wheels do you have any insight into this?
 
Tanzania is way to rich for my blood to hunt.
 
Similar to Zambia, which stopped all hunting temporarily to address internal issues. Zambia is back hunting now and growing.

Stopping export temporarily to address internal corruption would be my guess.
Tanzania understands hunting and conservation.
 
Tanzania understands hunting and conservation.

Not so sure anymore. Been getting reports over the last couple years and again just last week of very low game densities in many blocks that were once thriving with wildlife.
 
Just in the process of booking...will see what outfitter knows.
 
Wheels do you have any insight into this?

Don't know any specifics. Brickburn's thoughts on corruption might hit close.

Tanzania got a new president last fall. He is pretty aggressive in getting things done and seems very proactive in stamping out corruption, idleness, making cabinet members do their jobs,etc. Lots of changes going on. I don't think this will last very long. Too big of an economic impact by leaving it shut down.



Not so sure anymore. Been getting reports over the last couple years and again just last week of very low game densities in many blocks that were once thriving with wildlife.

Hunting fees and prices are high. Hunts not selling. Outfitters turning back concessions. No antipoaching going on. Wildlife is the victim. The "Golden Goose" is bleeding......
 
I don't know the truth to this, but a few years back I came across an article about some unscrupulous outfitters, overhunting their concessions. They supposedly had ties to people high up in the political food chain. There were supposedly concessions in the Selous that were pillaged well beyond reasonable quotas.

Can't remember where I saw the article, or the validity of it. It was rather disturbing.

Tanzania puts hunting blocks up for bid on a 5 year lease. I think they are coming up for bid next year again?
 
I don't know the truth to this, but a few years back I came across an article about some unscrupulous outfitters, overhunting their concessions. They supposedly had ties to people high up in the political food chain. There were supposedly concessions in the Selous that were pillaged well beyond reasonable quotas.

Can't remember where I saw the article, or the validity of it. It was rather disturbing.

Tanzania puts hunting blocks up for bid on a 5 year lease. I think they are coming up for bid next year again?


There was an article in a Tanzania newspaper a few years ago about white ph's making $2,000 per day while black ph's were making under $100 per day. Obviously misstated and not apples to apples. I understand that indigenous Tanzanians got preferential treatment on the last biding round on concessions. They had no connections to market their properties and couldn't pay the fees and turned many concessions back. At least this is what I have been told.
 
The Tanzania hunting season will soon be in full swing. I wonder what reprecussions it will have for outfitters/hunters, that have booked hunts for CITES animals?
 
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The Tanzania hunting season will soon be in full swing. I wonder what implications it will have for outfitters/hunters, that have booked hunts for CITES animals?

I'd guess that this will either get sorted quickly or that the prices are about to drop a bunch more for those safaris with a CITES animal.

Realistically what does this impact assuming a US hunter? Leopard? Already can't bring in lion or elephant. I'm sure there is PG that would qualify was well?

Larger impact would of course be to those countries who currently can import ele or lion...
 
Hope they do get things sorted out and back to hunting.
 
It has been stated that up to 60% of previous Tanzania hunting revenues came from wealthy Lion hunters. Considering the Lion ban, and Leopard being a more affordable hunt, I imagine many Leopard hunts are already booked.

What else is on CITES, Crocodile?
 
Well based on the Tanzania hunts offered to me what makes these hunts so expensive is the damn government fees. This is the worse case scenario where the prices can't really drop due to government fees and the outfitters can't sell a product to a client due to government regulations.
 
CITES website states the export quota for Tanzania Leopard is 500.
 
All primates are CITES I think. No baboons.
 
Hippo, hyaena and most cats. Not 100% sure.
 
5.000 animals are included in the CITES convention, listed under Appendix I, II and III.

They cant´t be referring to all listed trophies (I hope)
 
Ranger corruption 'impeding global fight against poaching'
Wildlife rangers are being bribed by criminal poaching syndicates to turn a blind eye to illegal killings, conservation chiefs warn

Corruption-among-wildlife-009.jpg

A Filipino wildlife officer shows seized elephant tusks and dried sea turtle from a Tanzanian shipment. Photograph: Dennis M. Sabangan/EPA
Corruption among wildlife rangers is becoming a serious impediment in the fight against poaching, fuelled by soaring levels of cash offered by criminal poacher syndicates, senior conservation chiefs have admitted.

Rangers in countries as diverse as Tanzania and Cambodia are being bribed by increasingly organised poaching gangs keen to supply ivory, rhino horn and tiger parts to meet huge consumer demand in Asia.

While prices for ivory and rhino horn, in particular, have risen dramatically in recent years, ranger wages have failed to keep pace, resulting in a spate of bribery scandals.

"There's more money floating around now from the poachers, so it's more of a problem than ever before," said Sean Willmore, president of the Australian-based International Ranger Federation.

"It's as bad as I've known it. If rangers aren't getting enough remuneration, they can be corrupted. In Cambodia, for example, rangers were being paid $100 a month and that was cut to $30 a month by the government. What do you do if you want to feed your family?"

While rangers in many countries remain chronically underfunded, with Willmore claiming that a lack of proper equipment and training is rife in poaching hotspots, the rewards for turning a blind eye to the illegal killing of rhinos and elephants have never been higher.

The standard "bush" market value of ivory is $300 per kilogramme, meaning that a 30kg haul from a single elephant can bring in $9,000. From this, a ranger that turns a blind eye can get a cut of $2,000 – far more than his or her standard salary.

The situation is particularly dire in Tanzania, which is losing around 70 elephants a day to poachers. The country has seen around half of its elephants slaughtered in just the last three years.

Willmore said that corruption in the country is "systematic". Last year, the government minister and top officials at Tanzania's Wildlife Department were fired for taking bribes for the assignment of hunting blocs and, more brazenly, arranging for 116 live animals to be loaded onto a jumbo jet and flown to Qatar.

But the economics are still lopsided even if the poachers are caught, with the punishment following conviction being as little as a $13 fine.

Pratik Patel, the chief executive of the African Wildlife Trust, said: "The situation is very chronic – we've seen evidence of the armed forces and rangers colluding with poachers."

"You're looking at very well-organised crime syndicates, spreading money around and buying services of government individuals."

"It's like the cocaine industry. Or the mafia. The money allocated to conservation is so minimal that it just can't compete with that."

Patel estimates that corruption rates among rangers in east Africa are running at around 50%. While big-name national parks such as the Serengeti and Ngorongoro are generally safe from poachers, the majority of animals in Tanzanialive in areas where protection is sparse or compromised.

"You have good rangers and you have bad rangers," he said. "A shooter will be paid to kill the elephant and five or six people will hack the ivory off the body. They then ship it out in a concealed consignment for Malaysia or Vietnam.

"A lot of the shooters are in the military. They have armour piercing bullets and government vehicles. They can travel without being stopped. The rangers are paid to look the other way and give information on patrols."

Patel said that the Chinese government should do more to crack down on the supply of ivory and rhino horn, given the booming demand for the products in the country.

But there is a growing realisation that the numbers, both financially and personnel-wise, are tipping in the poachers' favour, placing rangers in an invidious position.

"Many rangers work for very low pay and don't become corrupt," said Willmore. "I've seen rangers refuse a bribe and say 'I have no reward for this job, so all you can take from me is my integrity'.

"We want rangers to be rewarded better, but not just financially. They need respect and proper support from their governments. The governments also need to clean things up and get rid of the bad eggs."

The Guardian 2013
 

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Just spoke with our outfitter in Tanzania and it appears the person in charge of issuing the permits was recently fired and once a new person is appointed it will be business as usual.
 

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