Nov. 4, 2007
The Ivory War
Scott Pelley On The Challenging War On Elephant Poachers
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(CBS)
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Despite an international trading ban, poachers are still killing elephants for their tusks. (CBS)
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"The smell is overwhelming. Here’s one, two, three, four, five, six, looks like seven right here," Pelley notes.
Three rangers were killed in the fight. Thirty three elephants lay dead, their bodies decomposing rapidly in the 110 degree heat.
"This has got to make you angry?" Pelley remarks to a ranger.
"I am here to protect the elephants. When I see one of them lying down, it’s like seeing my child hurt on the ground," the ranger replies.
In just the last year and a half, the rangers found 298 dead elephants, nearly ten percent of the refuge population.
"It's like killing a human to extract the gold out of their fillings, you know? That's all they take. And you just think that is so telling of humanity. Where we can destroy this incredibly complex beautiful animal, to take a piece of ivory. To be used for what? To satisfy human vanity," Fay says.
Tusks are elephant teeth: on one end, a tusk is hollow where the root used to be, and solid on the other end. Tusks are pretty substantial, too: a tusk Pelley held weighed about 20 pounds. The poachers are getting $25 a pound, so that a 20 lb. tusk would go for about $500. No wonder they call it white gold. One hundred tusks were laid out in front of Pelley, the tusks of 50 elephants.
Those 100 tusks were just the ones Nicola and his men managed to confiscate in one small district in the last three months.
Who are the poachers? 60 Minutes heard that some of them had been captured recently. And a local police chief took Pelley and the team to see them.
"The police say that you were caught with elephant tusks," Pelley remarked.
"Yeah, for sure," one of the men replied to Pelley through a translator.
"Why did you have them?" Pelley asked.
"They say that they are poor and they were just in need of food," the translator replied.
Asked how many elephants had been killed, the translator said, "In a month, they killed 14 elephants."
"Fourteen elephants in a month? Do you know what happens to the tusks after they are exported from the country? Do you know what becomes of them?" Pelley asked.
"He doesn’t know," the translator replied.
He might be amazed to see where ivory goes and how it travels. Last year, a shipping container full of lumber was x-rayed by Hong Kong customs officers. Inside, 605 tusks were hidden behind a false wall. Interpol says that the same company shipped three more containers that got away.
"It’s the largest seizure in Hong Kong's history that we know about," says Tom Milliken, who tracks illegal ivory for the international convention that banned the ivory trade in 1989.
Produced By Solly Granatstein and Jenny Dubin
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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as many other animal groups. The segment on the Ivory War was hard to watch and eye opening to many people,I''m sure.More segments should be shown, as a
CONSTANT follow - up and ways in which we can help stop this poaching problem.I cannot emphasize how important it is to present such a tragedy and NOT include a way to help.
Another potential segment should be an expose` about
China, they eat ANYTHING that moves, whether it be slaughter of dolphins,whales or endangered species.
They affect the precious wildlife all over the world.
They take MORE than their share.It''s selfish and heartbreaking. Can we follow up PLEASE?
Sandra B.
I agree, in the case of the new ivory trade, boycott all chinese made goods in protest and in protest of the trash china is dumping on the rest of the world!!!
If poachers are successfully being kept at bay elsewhere in Africa, why aren''t their methods being transferred to Chad? If China thinks people aren''t going to link the demise of the elephant to its people, they are sadly mistaken. China will never live this down if it continues to fuel this disaster.