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Hong Kong

Lack of monitors of ivory destruction programme blasted

Lack of independent monitors of government's programme to destroy Hong Kong's stockpile of illegal tusks worries wildlife conservationists

Reading Time:4 minutes
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Hong Kong's tightly controlled programme to destroy one of the world's biggest stockpiles of illicit ivory has come under fire for its lack of transparency from a respected global watchdog.

Unlike cities on the mainland and around the world, independent observers such as non- government organisations and the media are banned from witnessing the closed-door destruction of the Hong Kong's ivory stockpile - a regulation that confounds wildlife campaigners.

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Yannick Kuehl, the regional director of Traffic, which monitors the international wildlife trade, said opening up the incinerations would help bolster trust in the process and promote Hong Kong as a model for wildlife conservation.

The government insists the current practice of only allowing members of a statutory advisory body to attend is sufficient.

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But Kuehl said: "I don't see any good reason not to allow independent third-party audits of the destruction. Monitoring would allow the Hong Kong government to set an example and role model in transparency regarding the destruction of ivory stockpiles.

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