Kenya burns 105 tonnes of ivory in bid to stop poaching

President Kenyatta sets fires to biggest stockpile of ivory tusks ever destroyed, in statement against ivory trade.

Kenya’s president has set fire to 105 tonnes of elephant ivory and more than a tonne of rhino horn, in a statement against the trade in ivory and products from endangered species.

Uhuru Kenyatta put a flame to the biggest of 11 pyres of ivory tusks and one of rhino horn in a chilly afternoon on Saturday.

“This is the largest stockpile destroyed in Africa,” said Al Jazeera’s Catherine Soi, reporting from Nairobi.


IN PICTURES: Kenya’s big bonfire of ivory


“The message here is that elephants are worth more alive than dead … This ivory is not all from Kenya. Some of it has been intercepted while in transit from other African countries,” she said.

Overnight torrential rains that stopped at around noon had threatened to ruin the event and created a mudfield in the ground around the piles inside the Nairobi National Park.

Kenyatta said Kenya will push for the total ban on trade in ivory at the 17th meeting of CITES, the Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species, to be held in South Africa later this year.

The stockpile of elephant ivory and rhino horn was believed to be the largest ever destroyed [Ben Curtis/AP]
The stockpile of elephant ivory and rhino horn was believed to be the largest ever destroyed [Ben Curtis/AP]
Source: Al Jazeera, News Agencies