Congratulate Mara Elephant Project 10-year Anniversary!

Join Elephanatics in congratulating our partner, the Mara Elephant Project (MEP) on a decade of operation today, September 12, 2021. In the last decade, MEP focused on teaching, training, and employing Maasai men and women to be first responders to save wildlife and wild spaces. Their commitment has disrupted poaching in the Greater Mara Ecosystem, protected critical forest habitat and ecologically key areas, and kept community’s farms and families safe. Elephanatics’ support has helped increase MEP’s impact and allowed them to strengthen, build and grow their decade of success. By working together, we can save wildlife and wild spaces.

Please consider a #donation to @MaraElephantProject to celebrate their 10 years of success.

#MEPKumiAnniversary

Elephanatics Donates to DART Wildlife Conservation

We are pleased to send money to www.dartwildlife.org who do outstanding conservation work in Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe. The funds raised at our annual Global March for Elephants and Rhinos, last September, 2017, will go to purchase a new dart delivery system including transmitter darts that will enable conservationists to dart and locate immobilized elephants at night. Their Elephant Protection Project is expected to commence in February to coincide with the peak crop-raiding season and the time when most elephants are persecuted or killed.
We thank all the people who donated their money and time to come to our event. Your funds will be put to great use towards purchasing this essential equipment required to help combat the ongoing poaching crisis and human-elephant conflict._DSC4366

Press Release: Local Elephant Organization Urges Canadian Government to Step Up Efforts to Protect African Elephants

 

Elephanatics BC, a Vancouver-based elephant advocacy organization, is hosting its 4th Annual Global Walk for Elephants and Rhinos on September 30. The walk is part of the Global March for Elephants and Rhinos – the world’s largest grassroots wildlife movement with more than 120 cities participating worldwide.

The goal of this initiative is to demand that all governments take action to stop the poaching of elephants and end the illegal trade in ivory.

Every day around 100 elephants in Africa are brutally killed for their tusks. That equates to one elephant every 15 minutes. Poaching has reached unprecedented levels, causing both conservationists and scientists to estimate the extinction of elephants in the wild within 10 – 20 years.

The Canadian government’s track record in protecting elephants is lackluster at best. At the 2016 IUCN World Conservation Congress, Canada was one of only four countries to vote against all countries closing their domestic ivory trade. At the 2016 Conference of the Parties to CITES, Canada voted against moving all African elephants to Appendix I to give them the highest level of protection.

In recent years, Canada has been the sole country to issue blanket reservations on all new CITES listings, and has failed to lift those reservations in a timely manner. These inexplicable positions put the Canadian government at odds with the growing international movement to save the African elephant from extinction.

Elephanatics BC has brought together a coalition of Canadian and international animal advocacy groups, to urge the government of Canada to fully protect African elephants. The organizations include BC SPCA, Canadian Federation of Humane Societies, Born Free, Zoocheck Canada, Animal Justice, WildlifeDirect and World Elephant Day Society. They have agreed to sign Elephanatic’s letter to the Canadian government and those attending the Global Walk for Elephants can sign a similar petition to be delivered with the letter.

The focus of the walk in Vancouver is to strongly urge the Canadian and provincial governments to:

  1. Make all import and domestic trade of elephant ivory illegal in Canada, as per Mike Farnworth’s (Solicitor General NDP) private member’s bill M 234 – Banning the Sale of Ivory and Rhinoceros Horns Act, 2016.
  2. Vote to move all elephants in all range countries to Appendix I, at all future opportunities.
  3. Update domestic legislation to facilitate timely compliance with Canada’s international obligations under CITES.

Sheryl Fink, IFAW’s Director of Wildlife Campaigns in Canada said, “It is extremely disappointing that Canada is not living up to our international obligations and it is setting a terrible example for other countries around the world. I would like to see the Liberal government live up to their commitment to provide greater protection for endangered species.” 

Event Details:

 4th Annual Global Walk for Elephants and Rhinos

Saturday, September 30 – 12:00 pm to 1:30 pm

Creekside Park (behind Science World)

http://covapp.vancouver.ca/parkfinder/parkdetail.aspx?inparkid=15

The event includes: music; elephant face painting and henna tattoos; an elephant market including t-shirts, artwork and jewelry; selfies with a life-size elephant; learning how you can help elephants; and a walk around the False Creek seawall.

 Elephanatics is a Vancouver, registered non-profit organization founded in May 2013.     It is run exclusively by volunteers who aim to help the long-term survival of African and Asian elephants through conservation, education and action. Elephanatics first introduced the city to the Global March for Elephants and Rhinos (GMFER) in October 2014 and has hosted the annual free event ever since. This year, the event will not be a march, but a -walk.

The Global March for Elephants and Rhinos is a registered, non-profit organization in the United States. It is a global movement demanding an end to ivory and rhino horn trade. The first march took place in 2013.

For more information, please contact:

 Tessa Vanderkop

Director of Strategic Relationships & Advocacy

Elephanatics

tvanderkop@gmail.com

604.789.8886

 

Websites:       http://www.elephanatics.org  and  http://www.march4elephantsandrhinos.org

Event pages: http://www.facebook.com/events/815113295321897 and http://www.facebook.com/march4elephants

Twitter:           @ElephanaticsBC  and  @EleRhinoMarch
Instagram:      March4ElephantsBC  and  GMFER2017