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| | South Africa May Legalize Rhino Horn Trade
The fate of South Africa’s rhinos rests in the hands of a committee tasked with deciding whether rhino horn should become a tradable commodity—a move African Wildlife Foundation (AWF) strongly opposes. South Africa, home to more than 80 percent of the world’s rhinos, lost a total of 1,215 rhinos last year—representing a 21 percent increase over 2013. The 21-person committee will decide if South Africa should submit a proposal to legalize rhino horn trade at the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora meeting in Cape Town next year. “We know from the experience with the ivory trade, however, that rhino horn will continue to be trafficked under cover of a legal trade, complicating our efforts to crack down on the illegal trade,” says AWF’s senior director of conservation science, Dr. Philip Muruthi.
> Find out what this could mean for the country’s rhinos | | | | | |
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| | Bright Futures
In rural Democratic Republic of Congo, AWF built a unique school that is synchronous with its jungle environment both in architecture and in curriculum. We held a ceremony to celebrate Ilima Conservation School’s community, its promising pupils and its special place in conservation. “Education is a powerful social investment that can disrupt the cycle of poverty and environmental degradation,” says AWF CEO Patrick Bergin.
> Learn about our newest conservation school | | | | | |
| | | | | | In 2014, South Africa lost 1,215 rhinos to human greed. Donate today to help AWF curb the black market trade in rhino horn. | | | | | | | | | | | |
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