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Lion Bone Trade, Ivory Stockpiles to Be Reviewed by South Africa

Lion Bone Trade, Ivory Practices to Be Reviewed by South Africa

(Bloomberg) --

South Africa’s trade in lion bones and its management of elephant ivory stockpiles will be among wildlife-related issues to be reviewed by an advisory committee established by the country’s environment ministry.

The 25-member committee will review a number of issues as criticism from anti-hunting campaigners and animal activists mounts. In August a High Court judge said that the allocation of export quotas for lion skeletons by the government was illegal.

“The department of environmental affairs has for some time dealt with a number of complex and emotive sustainable-use issues,” the environment department said in a statement. “These include the elephant management and culling debate, the management of the ivory stockpile, trade in rhinoceros horn, captive breeding and the emerging issue of lion bone trade.”

For more on the court ruling on lion bones click here

The appointment of the committee, which will carry out its work over a number of months, comes as southern African nations threaten to quit the United Nations’s Convention on International Trade in Wild Species of Flora and Fauna over regulations on elephant management.

The committee will examine the legal trade in lion bones and skins from South Africa to East Asia and the hunting of leopards and trade in their skins. It will also examine the feasibility of establishing a legal trade in rhino horns.

Lion bones are used as a substitute for tiger bones, which are believed by some people to have medical properties.

To contact the reporter on this story: Antony Sguazzin in Johannesburg at asguazzin@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: John McCorry at jmccorry@bloomberg.net, Gordon Bell

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