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eBay took an important step toward contributing to the
effort of animal welfare organizations of saving the elephants, by announcing a
ban on the sale of ivory products, which will be fully implemented by January
2009.
The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) applauded eBay’s for its decision to protect the elephants, and called for other Internet
dealers to adopt the same measure, and take responsibility for the impact their
business has on endangered species.
“eBay has set the standard for protecting elephants, now
governments and other online dealers need to follow their example ,” Barbara
Cartwright, IFAW Campaigns Manager, said in a statement following the
announcement.
According to an IFAW report, which will be made public on
Tuesday, over 70 percent of endangered species products are listed for sale in
the United States, accounting for 10 times the number of products tracked in
the next two countries on the list, the United Kingdom and China.
A month-and-a-half-long investigation revealed over 7,000
endangered wildlife products on 183 Web sites in 11 countries. The importance
of eBay’s gesture is impressive, considering that eBay was also found to be the
largest distributor of such objects.
The investigation found over 4,000 elephant ivory listings,
most of them on eBay. “Internet dealers profit off of every piece of elephant
ivory sold on their Web sites,” IFAW Washington’s Director Jeff Flocken
explained, “and every piece of that ivory came from a dead elephant.”
The Animal Welfare Organization revealed that a pair of
elephant tusks has been purchased for over $21,000 from eBay. The situation is
getting worse, and ivory transactions are still current, despite the fact that they have been illegal for almost two decades now, with very few
exceptions.
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