Source:
https://scmp.com/news/asia/southeast-asia/article/2165778/demand-lucky-hair-puts-vietnams-elephants-jeopardy
Asia/ Southeast Asia

Demand for ‘lucky’ hair puts Vietnam’s elephants in jeopardy

Trade in elephant hairs putting country’s few remaining animals at risk

An elephant trainer walks with a rescued elephant in Yok Don National Park, Dak Lak province, Vietnam. Photo: AFP

In a village in Vietnam’s “elephant kingdom”, a vendor holds up a severed, dried tail dotted with coarse hairs she promises will bring good luck – a grim new trade that is endangering the country’s few remaining elephants.

“I’ll cut a hair off right in front of you here, so you can be sure it’s not fake,” said the saleswoman in Tri A village in the country’s forested central highlands.

A fondness for rings and bracelets embedded with elephant hairs is fuelling a worrying fashion fad in a country notorious for its illicit wildlife trade, from rhino horns to pangolin scales, tiger teeth and bear bile.

Earrings and rings decorated with elephant hair and ivory on sale at a shop in Dak Lak province. Photo: AFP
Earrings and rings decorated with elephant hair and ivory on sale at a shop in Dak Lak province. Photo: AFP

The trend is putting a strain on the few surviving elephants in Vietnam whose hairs are plucked or tails cut off by poachers, leaving the animals without the crucial appendage used to swat flies and keep their backsides clean.

“The tail is very much a part of body hygiene, so by plucking the hairs out … or cutting the entire lower tail off, you’re putting a handicap on your elephant,” Dionne Slagter, Animal Welfare Manager at Animals Asia, said.

With just 80 elephants left in captivity and about 100 in the wild – down from as many as 2,000 in 1990 – Slagter suspects most of the tails are being smuggled in from neighbouring countries or as far afield as Africa.

The appetite for elephant parts is a cruel trend familiar to much of the region.

In nearby Myanmar elephants are killed to feed a growing demand at home and in China for their skin, believed to cure eczema or acne.

Loss of habitat and poaching have also badly dented elephant numbers in Thailand, Cambodia and Laos, where they were worshipped for centuries.

In Vietnam, too, the M’nong and Ede ethnic minorities in Dak Lak province – dubbed the “elephant kingdom” for the large herds that once roamed its forests – hold a deep spiritual reverence for the animals.

A 7-year-old elephant named Jun, rescued from a poacher’s trap in the forest, recovers at Dak Lak Elephant Conservation Centre in Dak Lak province. Photo: AFP
A 7-year-old elephant named Jun, rescued from a poacher’s trap in the forest, recovers at Dak Lak Elephant Conservation Centre in Dak Lak province. Photo: AFP

As legend goes, finding a tail hair by chance on the forest floor was considered good luck – local lore that has been peddled in recent years by shop owners selling the strands, along with ivory jewellery and Buddha statues that can fetch up to US$900.

But actively cutting off tails or plucking hairs was never part of the tradition.

“They loved and considered elephants part of their family so they wouldn’t do anything to hurt them,” according to Linh Nga Nie Kdam, a researcher on Ede culture. “They never sold their hair.”