It’s Friday the 13th but Good Luck for Us!

ELEPHACT FRIDAY:
Volunteers Make ALL The Difference! 
A big thank you to our grade 11 student volunteer, Muskan Sadioura, who has been super proactive in sharing Elephanatics mission to protect the African and Asian elephant!
Muskan is a student at Fleetwood Park Secondary School in Surrey and has worked diligently at sharing our lesson plans with teachers, encouraging other students to support us, and has given an announcement to her whole school about our organization.
She will be introducing Elephanatics to her elementary school’s student council this June and will give a school wide announcement next October about our organization. She has also offered to deliver presentations to summer camps that have requested us to speak this summer.
We can’t thank her enough for her passion and drive to support elephants and her desire to give back to the community.
Thank you, Muskan!!
Pic 1) Muskan delivers announcement to school.
Pic 2) Display in Fleetwood Park Secondary School hall on elephants.

United Kingdom and Taiwan Announce Tough Ban on Trade of Elephant Ivory. Will Canada Follow Suit?

On March 14th Elephanatics sent a letter to Minister McKenna asking her to enact legislation to close the legal domestic trade of elephant ivory in Canada. This last week both the United Kingdom and Taiwan announced they were implementing strict domestic trade bans. The following release was sent to media asking if the Canadian government might follow suit?

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Vancouver, BC – Elephanatics, an elephant advocacy non-profit group in Vancouver, was thrilled with Tuesday’s announcement that the United Kingdom will enact one of the strictest bans on domestic elephant ivory trade in the world. Only a few narrow exceptions will be allowed and violators will face up to five years in jail or an unlimited fine.

Response to the call for a global ban on domestic ivory markets was strengthened even further by Tuesday’s announcement that Taiwan plans to close its internal trade to help shut down illegal ivory markets worldwide.

On March 14, Elephanatics sent a letter to Catherine McKenna, Minister of Environment and Climate Change, asking the federal government to close the domestic trade of elephant ivory in Canada. The letter was backed by 95 national and international signatories including International Fund for Animal Welfare, Humane Society International, Canadian Federation of Humane Societies, The Jane Goodall Institute of Canada, Big Life Foundation, Wildlife Direct and Dr Richard Leakey, to name a few.

The following members of parliament have lent their support to the letter: Don Davies (Vancouver Kingsway), Nathaniel Erskine-Smith (Beaches-East York) and Fin Donnelly (Port Moody-Coquitlam). Solicitor General, the Honorable Mike Farnworth (Port Coquitlam) and member of the Legislative Assembly, Jane Thornthwaite (North Vancouver-Seymour) also signed.

In addition, over 140,000 people have signed Elephanatic’s petition asking the Canadian government to ban the legal domestic trade of elephant ivory in Canada. The petition is here.

The illegal trade of ivory is decimating one of the world’s most iconic keystone species, bringing it to the brink of extinction. Even worse is the heavy involvement of criminal networks where the money funds militant and terrorist groups such as the Lord’s Resistance Army in Uganda, Boko Haram in Nigeria and al-Shabaab in Somalia.

Fran Duthie, President of Elephanatics says, “We would like to see the Canadian government enable legislation as soon as possible to end the legal domestic trade of elephant ivory. In light of the recent news of the UK closing its local ivory trade with minor exemptions and China, France and the US enacting strict bans on their ivory trade, Canada needs to take a leading stance beside the rest of the international community and ban all domestic trade in elephant ivory.”

Every year approximately 20,000 African elephants are killed for their ivory. There has been a 97% decline in their population in the last century with an estimated 415,000 remaining. Conservationists and scientists estimate they will be extinct in the wild within 20 years if the rate of poaching does not change.

Elephanatics looks forward to the government’s response to their letter submitted to the Minister on March 14.

About Elephanatics:
Elephanatics is a Vancouver-based elephant advocacy organization that promotes the long-term survival of African and Asian elephants through conservation, education and action.

Media Contact:

Tessa Vanderkop – Director of Advocacy
604-789-8886
elephanaticsinfo@gmail.com

Global Walk for Elephants |Vancouver 2017

Hi everyone and especially Vancouverites,

Elephanatics is once again hosting the Global Walk for Elephants and Rhinos on September 30th | 12:00 pm to 1:30 pm at Creekside Park |1455 Quebec Street | Vancouver.

Every 15 minutes an elephant is killed for its ivory. Every 8 hours a rhino is poached for its horn. Conservationists estimate that elephants will be extinct in the wild within 10 to 20 years. Several species of rhino have already become extinct. Closing loopholes in global markets and decreasing demand for ivory and rhino horn is essential if these species are to survive.

Advocacy

The focus for this year’s event is on advocacy. Many people ask what Canadians have to do with African elephants. Well, it turns out quite a bit.

Canada was one of only four countries that voted against all countries closing their domestic ivory trade during the 2016 IUCN World Conservation Congress. At the 17th Meeting of the Conference of the Parties to CITES, Canada voted against moving all African elephants to Appendix I to provide 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 a growing international movement to save the African elephant from extinction.

Find out how you can become involved in saving one of the world’s most iconic, essential and beautiful species at the Global Walk for Elephants event.

While we take what we do seriously, we also like to have some fun so there will be face-painting, henna tattoos, music, cool people who like to make a difference and some awesome t-shirts for sale to help raise money for frontline conservation work in Africa.

T-shirts for this year’s march.
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Posters! – Please share:)
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Marchers toolkit 2017

Thanks and we hope to see you there!