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  • 'The African elephant, the largest animal on Earth, is under threat.

  • 'Some herds are being decimated at an alarming rate.'

  • We're truly worried about the future of elephants.

  • Some places have lost almost all their elephants.

  • 'They are still being hunted for their ivory despite a trade ban in place for more than 20 years.'

  • Oh, yeah, here it is.

  • Ask him about the elephant that was killed.

  • These people are armed, very well armed - G3s, AK-47s.

  • 'Even the youngest are in the firing line.'

  • Kasigau over there has got a clear wound.

  • 'And seizures of illegal ivory are at a new high.'

  • What is at the heart of the illegal killing of elephants in Africa

  • can be summarised in one word - money.

  • How much is this one? 'We go under cover to find the ivory dealers.'

  • 10,000 for one?

  • 'We see the new technology being used to track down the criminals.'

  • These poachers are hammering the sam area over and over and over again.

  • 'We go on the trail of the poachers, smugglers and organised crime syndicates

  • 'into a web that stretches to south-east Asia and beyond...

  • 'to the biggest ivory buyer of all.'

  • 90% of all the people we have arrested at our airports ferrying ivory...

  • ..are Chinese.

  • China is the future for elephants. If China can curb its demand...

  • ..elephants will survive in Africa.

  • One, two, three, four, five, six, seven,

  • eight, nine, ten, all right?

  • 'But can this demand be stifled?

  • 'Or is it already too late?'

  • 'Port Klang near Kuala Lumpur. It's the busiest port in Malaysia

  • 'and the last stop for vessels heading to the Far East.'

  • SIREN WAILS

  • 'For three months, Customs have been tracking a container from Africa.

  • 'Intelligence has alerted them to contraband hidden deep within packing crates.

  • 'Inside, a shocking discovery.

  • 'Nearly one and a half tonnes of illegal ivory,

  • 'worth almost a million pounds, the equivalent of around 150 dead elephants.

  • 'And all this at a time when an international ban is supposed to stop the killing.'

  • We found that the container was full of...

  • Despite a 23-year international ban on the trade in ivory,

  • all indications are that demand is booming,

  • getting higher and higher each year.

  • Last year saw the highest number of large seizures of illegal ivory

  • for over two decades.

  • 'Up until the middle of last year, Malaysia hadn't made a single large ivory seizure in nearly a decade.

  • 'This is their fourth large bust in just five months.'

  • All we're doing here is stopping the smuggler

  • from getting his products. It's really good.

  • We need more of this, so we shut down the business.

  • 'Today, Malaysia is the latest country to emerge for ivory smuggling,

  • 'but it's just one of the many staging posts around the world

  • 'in a multi-million-pound criminal trade.'

  • It takes a large amount of organised activity to be able to move

  • and manoeuvre all these activities to the product ending up in Asia,

  • so one can assume it's organised crime.

  • 'So to understand the links in this chain, I'm going back to where it all begins - Africa.

  • 'Man has always hunted elephants here - for meat, sport and for ivory.

  • 'Its tusks were traditionally used in carvings, piano keys and even false teeth.

  • 'Today, some conservationists fear killings are so out of control

  • 'that elephants could soon disappear for ever in parts of the continent.

  • 'Kenya - a popular safari destination.

  • 'Tourism is essential to the country's economy,

  • 'but even here in Samburu in the north,

  • 'a place where elephants have recently thrived,

  • 'there are alarming new signs,

  • 'sickening images tourists rarely see.

  • 'I'm following the trail left by elephant poachers.'

  • We're on our way with Stephen, who is the conservation warden for the West Gate Community here,

  • because we've heard that there's an elephant which has been killed,

  • the carcass of which is, I think, not very far away.

  • Oh, yeah, here it is.

  • FLIES BUZZING

  • This was killed right here? It has been killed using bullets, a gun.

  • Six rounds.

  • Death always brings this disgusting, high, sweet smell

  • and it seems to sort of hit you in the stomach and cling to your skin and your hair,

  • but more than the smell, actually, it's the shocking sight of this adult female elephant

  • with her face having been hacked off because the poachers wanted to take the tusks.

  • 'Older elephants, due to the size of their tusks, are most vulnerable to the poachers' snares and guns.'

  • How old was this elephant?

  • So a full, mature...?

  • She was pregnant? Yes.

  • 'The warden thinks two poachers were involved in the slaughter.

  • 'Just a few feet away lie the remains of the elephant's dead baby.'

  • These are also the ribs. The ribs.

  • Oh, these are the ribs of the little elephant? Yeah.

  • You can see now. Yeah.

  • 'The carcass was found just outside the gates of Samburu National Reserve.

  • 'It's a base for Save The Elephants, a charity founded by Iain Douglas-Hamilton.

  • 'Iain witnessed the decimation of Kenya's herds in the 1970s and '80s when numbers plummeted.

  • 'They recovered after the ivory trade ban was agreed in 1989.

  • 'But in the last three years, Samburu has lost a quarter of its elephants,

  • 'in large part due to poaching.'

  • At the moment, we're having a poaching spike.

  • It's worse than it's ever been before.

  • This spike is very serious because if it got out of hand,

  • it would threaten not only elephants,

  • but also the communities around.

  • 'Poaching has an enormous impact on the herd as a whole.

  • 'Elephants live in a matriarchal family where females lead the group.'

  • They really live in a multi-tiered system

  • of many, many relationships radiatin out into the whole population.

  • We've been able to show through experiments

  • that a given female knows at least 100 other adult females just by voice alone.

  • The loss of any individual in a family is really profound, particularly adults.

  • When one of them dies, it is a major, major event

  • and you can see that they actually mourn the death.

  • Any calf that she has that is under the age of, say, two or three,

  • is definitely going to die

  • unless it's rescued somehow.

  • 'It's a constant battle to try and stay one step ahead of the criminals.

  • 'Gilbert Sabinga works for Save The Elephants.

  • 'He is mapping where poachers have been active as part of a system called MIKE.'

  • So all these red dots here...?

  • And there's a lot down here in this area.

  • 'Technology is a vital tool in monitoring and protecting the animals,

  • 'but it's a huge challenge in the 165-square-kilometre reserve.

  • 'Eight elephants are fitted with a satellite collar.

  • 'It sends text messages to a radio antenna and tracks their routes.

  • 'If the signal stops moving for a matter of hours, it could be a sign of a poacher in the area,

  • 'so the team spring into action.'

  • That's a warning sign?

  • 'Today, Gilbert wants to check up on two matriarchs

  • 'called Wendy...

  • 'and Mercury.

  • 'The team wants to make sure their herds are safe from poachers active in the area.'

  • So, Gilbert, you've just done the whole thing with the antenna and found not Wendy, but Mercury? Yeah.

  • And they're just the other side of the river here? Just this side of the river here.

  • 'First, we find a straggler separated from the group.'

  • We know that they must be around here somewhere because that young male elephant we just saw,

  • basically doubled back in this direction to try to find the rest of the herd.

  • Actually, the signal is very strong on that side.

  • 'Then suddenly, we spot the herd in the distance.

  • 'The family is all accounted for and safe from the poachers...for now.'

  • So there's Mercury. She's the head of this family.

  • You can see around her neck the collar with the beacon on top of it that's sending this signal.

  • That's how we've been able to trace her.

  • It's amazing seeing them with their little baby elephants and how protective they are towards them,

  • making sure that they travel in between two of the adults.

  • 'But some families are not as lucky as Mercury's.

  • 'Some of the poachers' youngest victims end up here - an elephant orphanage just outside Nairobi.

  • 'This morning, it's feeding time for the babies.

  • 'Tourists pay to see them up close. The money goes towards their upkeep,

  • 'along with funding for anti-poaching teams.'

  • KEEPER CALLS OUT TO ELEPHANTS

  • Come on. Come on.

  • 'Abdul is one of the orphanage's most experienced keepers.

  • 'He looks after the orphan Kihari and, as her surrogate mother,

  • 'feeds, washes and even sleeps beside her every night.'

  • These ones were about six months old They have witnessed maybe

  • their mother being killed by poachers.

  • When they come here, they are so traumatised, they are so sad.

  • Sometimes you'll see baby elephants staying away from the others, their head bowed down, not happy at all.

  • 'Poaching numbers have nearly doubled in the past year alone in Kenya.

  • 'The youngest are abandoned as their tusks don't show until around two or three years old.

  • 'They're of no value to the criminals.'

  • It's only when you get quite close to the elephants

  • that you see some of the wounds that were inflicted upon them.

  • Kasigau over there has got a clear wound just below his right eye

  • and Rombo has got a hole in one of his ears because of an arrow.

  • 'Abdul says the orphans have nightmares, reliving the poachers' attacks,

  • 'and so need constant reassurance.'

  • SLURPING

  • 'But when the elephants are reintroduced into the wild, they may be at the mercy of the hunters.

  • 'I'm on my way to see what the poachers are after - raw tusks.

  • 'They're locked away in the offices of the Kenyan Wildlife Service on the edges of Samburu.

  • 'It's a dangerous area. Just days before we arrived,

  • 'people were shot in cattle-rustling skirmishes.'

  • These captured tusks are at the very heart of this story of the trade in illegal ivory

  • and they're a really pitiful sight, not just because you see the smashed-up, blooded tusks,

  • but they're also a reminder that no elephant is spared,

  • from large bull elephants whose tusks weigh nearly 30 kilos to little baby elephants

  • whose tusks weigh no more than two kilos.

  • So how do these poachers operate?

  • It's 5am.

  • Andy Marshall, a former SAS officer, is head of security

  • in charge of a 50-strong army.

  • A dead elephant has been discovered on a private nature reserve of 100,000 acres.

  • The owner has been attacked by poachers.

  • Today, they are following a tip-off from an informer.

  • These people are armed, very well armed.

  • G3s, AK-47s, because with the price of ivory,

  • everyone is going to chance their luck.

  • Andy suspects criminals have buried tusks from an elephant they killed ten days earlier.

  • This morning, they hoped to catch one of the gang red-handed and recover the ivory.

  • But they're too late. The poachers fled the camp. Only a young boy is left behind.

  • The team hunts for clues on the gang's whereabouts.

  • Ask him about the elephant that was killed.

  • CONVERSATIION IN LOCAL LANGUAGE

  • What about his father? Does he know?

  • And the three men that came to get its tusks?

  • But the little boy seems too scared to help.

  • This trail leads nowhere, but poaching is drawing in communities across Africa.

  • You have local people going out to make money to feed their families and to survive,

  • so they're your on-the-ground poachers that are recruited,

  • then you have professional poachers

  • that are moving into different regions or provinces.

  • All tend to link in to the same distributors.

  • Zambia - southern Africa.

  • On the outskirts of the capital Lusaka, they're tracking down the distributors and criminals.

  • The authorities are stepping up enforcement in key nations all over Africa

  • and Zambia is one of them.

  • Interpol is launching its biggest ever operation against the illegal ivory trade,

  • involving 14 countries across the continent.

  • David Higgins is Interpol's man on the ground, advising the hard-pressed local law enforcement.

  • We want to detect, apprehend and suppress the criminal activities.

  • We want to be able to demonstrate that over the next nine days.

  • This road is the main smuggling route for ivory poached from the nearby national park into Lusaka.

  • Today, officers have set up a road block.

  • Good afternoon, sir. All right?

  • Please park over here.

  • The operation includes officers from the Zambian Wildlife Authority, local police and customs

  • and has been in planning for nearly a year.

  • We got a lot of intelligence information,

  • linking us to a lot of people in Lusaka,

  • some of them that are keeping ivory in their homes.

  • After three days, the first proper breakthrough.

  • Officers prepare to arrest a suspected smuggler they have been tracking for two weeks.

  • The officers are concerned he may be armed.

  • Hello? KNOCKS ON DOOR

  • Do you want me to break the door?

  • Open the door!

  • Please, sit down. Sit down.

  • CONVERSATION IN LOCAL LANGUAGE

  • The suspect is found with two raw tusks stashed under the bed, worth £2,000.

  • If found guilty, he could get anything from five to 15 years in jail.

  • The officers get a break as they get more information about the gang.

  • They set up a rendezvous with another of them, but they shoot the suspect's tyres as he tries to flee.

  • Inside his van, ivory, but more importantly,

  • a wealth of intelligence on the smuggling syndicate.

  • This guy, actually, it has taken us more than ten years to apprehend.

  • For years, officers have only known the suspect under an alias,

  • but now they hope to discover his true identity.

  • They take him to his home to search for details on his buyers and the rest of the network.

  • The phone might be of value to you. Oh, yes.

  • Oh, right, yeah, his order. His order.

  • Just give us any documentation.

  • If you don't have your passport, just give us something.

  • The individual offered them a bribe

  • in the vicinity of 20,000 US dollars.

  • He would then no doubt get that from somebody higher up.

  • Otherwise, if he could get away, they won't get access to the entire chain and that vital information.

  • Eventually, they discover a passport and he is revealed

  • as a citizen from the neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo.

  • Officers plan further arrests.

  • The suspect will be charged with smuggling and bribery.

  • So far, the operation has led to numerous arrests,

  • as well as the seizure of ivory and guns and more are expected.

  • Official figures show increasing levels of poaching last year, the highest in a decade.

  • The key is cracking the syndicates who move the ivory around the globe.

  • Most of this plundered ivory is heading out of Africa.

  • At Nairobi's international airport,

  • Dick, the sniffer dog, is on a training exercise, searching for tusks.

  • Kenya, with one of Africa's biggest airports, is a smuggling hub.

  • Nearly 85% of ivory seized from around the world either comes from or passes through East Africa.

  • And Kenya's Wildlife Service has identified a startling link among the traffickers.

  • 90% of all the people we have arrested at our airports...

  • ..ferrying ivory are Chinese.

  • And the destinations of all contraband ivory,

  • it's always neighbouring countries around China.

  • Since 2007, the amount of seized ivory has gone up by 800% in Kenya.

  • This Chinese woman and two companions were arrested at the airport

  • with a suitcase stuffed with goods.

  • Years after Europe's colonialism ended,

  • Africa is witnessing a new scramble for its natural resources,

  • including ivory.

  • And there's a new big player in town - modern China.

  • The place is awash with its money.

  • China's dynamic economy is changing Africa's landscape and its cities for ever.

  • And its footprint can be seen from one end of the continent

  • to the other.

  • China has emerged as the leading driver of the illegal trade in ivory

  • For the first time in the history of continental Africa,

  • you have large numbers of Chinese living in Africa,

  • collecting the ivory and shipping it out.

  • And this is an incredibly potent force

  • when coupled with the fact that they probably have more finance available

  • than almost any other investor in Africa today.

  • So which countries in Africa is all this ivory coming from?

  • Cutting-edge DNA technology is being used to help solve that question.

  • These samples of ivory seized in Kenya are being tested.

  • The process will help local law enforcement to pinpoint where the elephants were killed.

  • Kenya has become a very important transit point for this ivory.

  • It's very important to know where it came from.

  • First, the team grinds the ivory to a powder to extract its DNA.

  • This DNA is then matched to Dr Wasser's previous DNA map of Africa which is compiled

  • from elephant dung samples.

  • When they are matched up, the two sets of DNA reveal where the elephant has come from originally.

  • We've found consistently that these large seizures have not come from multiple locations.

  • They have come from a core location, so these poachers are hammering the same area over and over again.

  • And elephants have been hit hardest in one part of Africa in particular.

  • Elephants are believed to exist in 37 sub-Saharan countries

  • with numbers estimated at between 500,000 and 700,000.

  • In Southern and East Africa, estimates, now five years old,

  • suggest numbers were actually growing by 4% a year.

  • But in Central Africa where poaching is rife,

  • it's feared numbers are plummeting.

  • There could be as few as 60,000 elephants left alive.

  • Elephants are threatened by many factors from the loss of their natural habitat

  • to the ever-growing human population.

  • And monitoring also shows that elephant killings are on the rise,

  • according to the man who oversees all the data.

  • Since about 2006 or so there's been a sustained increase

  • in illegal killing overall. That doesn't mean the same pattern

  • is happening in every part of the continent, but overall in Africa there's been a sustained increase.

  • Poaching thrives where governments and security is weakest.

  • One place more than any other in Africa is synonymous with chaos

  • and the destruction of its elephant population.

  • The Congo. One of the largest rivers in the world.

  • The country it flows through was once a byword for the most brutal excesses of colonialism

  • and ivory was at the heart of it all.

  • Today it's a failed state, blighted by a bitter civil war which has claimed millions of lives.

  • And the ivory trade continues.

  • The Democratic Republic of Congo is one of Africa's largest countries

  • and it sits at the very heart of the continent, but numerous reports say the elephant population

  • is being hammered by poaching.

  • The DRC is also consistently identified as one of the top countries

  • linked with the illegal trade in ivory.

  • 'Much of this ivory is from the forests of central Africa, sold openly in large unregulated markets

  • 'like this one in the capital, Kinshasa.

  • 'These black markets provide an outlet for poachers, carvers and smugglers.'

  • And this... I think this is a paperweight.

  • And this is a little elephant that's been carved out.

  • With a lion. 'Behind the coverings, large carvings, but the sellers are camera-shy.'

  • What's in here?

  • Can we see it? ..No, they're not letting us.

  • 'All this is going on in plain sight of the market supervisor.'

  • The reason why they're actually covering up some of the stalls

  • is because it actually houses the ivory we want to see

  • and when we tried to actually ask them to have a look underneath, they refused. But it's everywhere.

  • 'We've been in the market in Kinshasa, for example,'

  • and estimated the ivory from more than 200 elephants has been on the tables for sale on a single day.

  • These markets are patronised by ex-pat communities, Chinese business...

  • Chinese nationals are some of the biggest buyers, so we send in our Chinese colleague,

  • this time armed with hidden cameras, to see if the sellers would be less reticent.

  • 'They approached me straight away

  • 'and one actually say, "Xiangya." That means ivory in Chinese.

  • 'They were targeting me.'

  • 'I felt a little bit nervous, so before I left we exchanged telephone numbers.

  • 'I said I would contact him later.'

  • A couple of things. I have spoken to my people from...from my place.

  • I'm also interested in a very big tusk. That would be nice.

  • And the raw ivory so I can take it back with me.

  • That same afternoon, our colleague returns for a second meeting in our van,

  • under the nose of local police. We have no intention of seeing the deal through,

  • but we want to see what's for sale.

  • One, two, three, four, five, six, seven...eight, nine, ten.

  • All right. You've got ten here, but it's all very, very small.

  • 'The guy came back with a very, very big tusk.

  • 'I have never seen a tusk so big in my whole life.

  • 'The tusk is the same width as the van.'

  • Our investigator, anxious not to fuel the trade, declines the deal and cuts off all contact.

  • Within 24 hours of being here in Kinshasa, I've been offered ivory for sale

  • and I've seen it being openly traded throughout the market stalls here.

  • And what's more, my Chinese colleague was offered very large pieces of ivory,

  • in fact, whole tusks for sale and export.

  • I never imagined it would be so easy to buy ivory here in Kinshasa.

  • There's the, um, tusks. Ivory tusks.

  • 'We wanted to see if what we'd found confirmed other reports about China's role in this trade.

  • 'We took our footage to a campaigner with expertise in the field.'

  • Being Chinese,

  • I feel really ashamed of this image

  • the Chinese present in Africa.

  • You know, you come to a market and they approach you with, "Xiangya, Xiangya!"

  • Obviously, they recognise Chinese are the buyers.

  • And at the heart of this trade is an elephant found primarily in the forests of central Africa.

  • Smaller than their savanna elephant cousins, their ivory is straighter and pinker.

  • Hidden away, they are difficult to track, making it hard to attract tourists and money.

  • This leaves them especially vulnerable to poachers.

  • And according to some scientists, it's a whole new species that's under threat.

  • African elephants represent two species.

  • Forest elephants and savanna elephants.

  • The forest elephant has an extra toe. Genetically, they are as different as the lion and tiger.

  • The Congo Basin is thought to have once had over 100,000 elephants,

  • but in the DRC today there could be fewer than 20,000.

  • A possible new species under threat of extinction.

  • Forest elephants are so important to this ecosystem. They are being annihilated and we can't stop it.

  • The illegal trade in ivory seems to be booming in spite of a global ban.

  • So what's going wrong?

  • The 1989 ban rules out international trade, but domestically countries regulate their own markets

  • where some ivory can be sold.

  • But four years ago, CITES, the body which overseas the wildlife trade, lifted the ban

  • to allow four southern African countries to sell stockpiled ivory to China and Japan.

  • Some say it was a move which changed everything.

  • When that trade ban was put into place, ivory prices dropped.

  • And that, effectively, controlled poaching.

  • However, as soon as that one-off sale is allowed,

  • ivory prices start going up, people start wanting the ivory

  • and poachers start killing the elephants.

  • CITES has found no direct link between the legal sales and increased killings or trade.

  • But the arguments are likely to be reignited later this year

  • when more African countries are expected to put in requests to sell stockpiled ivory.

  • Supporters say countries that properly protect elephants should be allowed to profit from them.

  • It's so vital that local people

  • and the countries where elephants are present in large numbers

  • get economic benefit from the use of ivory.

  • Local livelihoods are already tight in Africa and the more that wildlife

  • can help to contribute and pay its way, the more interest there will be in conserving it.

  • But those opposed to allowing further sales say it will only fuel demand

  • and could threaten all of Africa's elephants.

  • It's true that the elephant populations in southern Africa

  • have been doing particularly well over the last 20 years.

  • What is going to happen when the elephants of the Congo are finally wiped out

  • when the elephant populations of east Africa are under siege?

  • I think the demand to be satisfied, if it remains at the present level,

  • will inevitably have to move south

  • to exploit those secure populations and they will see what's coming.

  • 'If Africa's elephants are under so much pressure, is there any way to curb the flow of ivory?

  • 'I'm following one of the routes of smuggled ivory here to Malaysia, south-east Asia.

  • 'Its ports are one of the main gateways for smuggling contraband - cigarettes, alcohol, drugs

  • 'and, of course, ivory.'

  • And in one six-month period alone, five seizures were made, amounting to six tons,

  • the largest ever such haul in Malaysia. To put that into context,

  • those six tons of ivory would have come from approximately 700 elephants.

  • Nine million containers pass through this port every year.

  • Royal Malaysian Customs are in charge of searching out contraband smuggled by the crime syndicates.

  • 'I'm out on patrol with three teams, just outside Kuala Lumpur.

  • 'Today they are doing a routine stop and search.

  • 'Barter boats like these are just one of the many vessels used to smuggle ivory into the country.'

  • The boat's from Indonesia, going to Malaysia. Most carry vegetables

  • and also...fish, crabs, some seafood.

  • 'They check the ship's manifest and inspect the cargo.

  • 'Everything's in order and the captain's allowed to carry on to port.

  • 'It's an almost impossible task to keep track of all the ivory heading to China.'

  • You've seen these gangs increasingly trying to use Malaysia as a transit point

  • for this illegal ivory.

  • When you actually look at the containers themselves,

  • it strikes you that without any intelligence as to where to look,

  • it must be impossible to find the illegal ivory that comes in these containers.

  • 'Last year they got a break when a port worker tipped them off about a shipment from east Africa.

  • 'They took me to their heavily-guarded strongroom, which has never been filmed before,

  • 'to view the captured tusks.'

  • We're going to be shown the ivory from two large seizures

  • from August and September of 2011.

  • In this one room, there's over 1,400 pieces of ivory.

  • The combined weight is over 4,000 kilograms

  • and they have an estimated black market value of £1.2 million.

  • 'Wildlife crime is thought to be second only to drugs in terms of profit.

  • 'It's suspected these two containers of ivory, marked as recycled plastic, were from the same gang.

  • 'There are few leads and no arrests so far.

  • 'The hauls are just a fraction of the smuggled ivory sent to try to satisfy demand in the Far East.'

  • China is definitely the largest end destination

  • for ivory products, trinkets.

  • For some reason it sells very well in China.

  • So with the overwhelming demand coming from just one place, that's where my journey leads to next.

  • I'm here now in Hong Kong, but over there is the Chinese mainland.

  • China is the biggest importer by weight of illegal ivory in the world.

  • 'I wanted to investigate China's voracious appetite for ivory,

  • 'its fascination with shaping, carving and trading it.

  • 'Lee-Cheong Leung has been working and sculpting ivory for more than half a century.

  • 'He is one of the last master carvers working in Hong Kong today.'

  • What is it about ivory that the Chinese like so much?

  • TRANSLATED: I think this is linked to the traditional culture of the Chinese.

  • When you look back at the history of China, spanning 3,000-4,000 years,

  • when we dig and find things from our past, they're often made of ivory.

  • Mr Leung says he carves from legal stocks acquired before the international ban of 20 years ago.

  • He also uses legal ivory from the extinct woolly mammoth.

  • Mammoth ivory, dug up from the frozen wastes of Siberia,

  • is softer, darker and not as highly prized as elephant ivory.

  • When you're working with this ivory, knowing where it's come from,

  • that animals have died in order to provide this tusk,

  • do you feel a sense of personal conflict?

  • TRANSLATION: First of all, I should explain

  • that when I carve ivory, I use very little raw material.

  • The natural life cycle of elephants through illness and death means

  • there's enough ivory for me to carve anyway. And each carving takes years.

  • 'One of Mr Leung's regular customers is Elsa Lao, owner of the restaurant based next door to his stall.

  • 'I wanted to view her valuable collection of ivory pieces

  • 'to see why it's so prized in China.'

  • Tell me what's inside this box. OK. You can see inside.

  • Wow. How much would, for example, this spoon cost?

  • How much? About...

  • 5,000. 5,000 Hong Kong dollars. Yes, Hong Kong dollars.

  • Which is about £500. Mm-hm. Yes.

  • That's expensive.

  • 'Miss Lao says her love of ivory is part of the family tradition.'

  • Do you think you'll keep buying more ivory in the future? I hope so. I think I will.

  • And she's just one of many with money to spend here in booming Hong Kong.

  • And the money here is just a fraction of the wealth over on the mainland.

  • That's why the rules on buying ivory are so crucial.

  • The 2008 one-off sale of African ivory to China

  • depended on the country demonstrating proper regulation of its domestic market.

  • Every ivory shop must be registered

  • and every item on display has its own unique identification card,

  • so that every piece of ivory can be tracked after sale.

  • We wanted to go from here in Hong Kong to mainland China

  • and see if the regulations are working. We didn't get permission,

  • but, undeterred, we sent in an undercover team instead,

  • including the colleague who had secretly filmed for us in Congo.

  • We headed to Guangzhou in southern China.

  • It's been at the heart of the ivory trade for centuries.

  • And China's economy is expanding rapidly.

  • There is more disposable income in China than in history.

  • Ivory has the cachet of being a luxury status commodity

  • and more people than ever before are able to own a piece of ivory now.

  • The demographics of China

  • absolutely swamp anything.

  • So how is China policing its trade in ivory?

  • Our first stop for the undercover team was the state-owned Friendship store,

  • situated alongside the likes of Gucci, Dior and Prada.

  • Here carvings sell for hundreds of thousands of pounds.

  • It's a shop licensed by the authorities to sell ivory.

  • We wanted to see if all the elephant ivory items for sale came with the necessary certificates.

  • Not true. Every elephant ivory item on sale should have a certificate.

  • There is no evidence the store is selling illegal ivory, but we saw many items without certificates

  • and it's not clear if the shop had them.

  • There was also some confusion from the saleswoman about how the ivory is obtained from the animals.

  • 'A survey of Chinese people showed many were also unsure of where the ivory comes from.'

  • 7 out of 10 people do not even know

  • the ivory they buy from the shops comes from elephants killed

  • because in Chinese elephant ivory literally translates as "elephant teeth".

  • So people think if it's teeth, it's very easy.

  • You know, it can fall off, it will grow back in.

  • Finally, to test whether there really was any paperwork, we bought a necklace clasp worth £15.

  • We left the shop with the elephant ivory, but no one gave us the ID card.

  • What we found is that 75% of the Chinese consumers,

  • if they have a chance to buy ivory with a cheaper price without the ID card,

  • they would prefer not to have the ID card.

  • Failure to give a certificate with each sale of legal ivory

  • undermines China's commitment to regulate its market.

  • It's impossible to be sure what's legal and what isn't.

  • Responding to our secret filming, the Friendship store in Guangzhou said all of its ivory products

  • complied with regulations and that sales records from the day we filmed

  • showed they had all the necessary paperwork.

  • 'But it's not only us who have tracked this problem.

  • 'Numerous reports have suggested China's domestic market is riddled with holes.'

  • What we found is in Guangzhou and a small town called Fuzhou, also in southern China,

  • is that 63% of the items did not have the proper identification.

  • The regulations also say you need to have it close by to the individual piece.

  • That wasn't always the case.

  • So if the supposedly regulated system is in disarray, how easy is it to access the black market?

  • Another stop for our undercover team was a market in Guangzhou.

  • Reports suggest Guangzhou is a hot spot for the trade

  • and this appears to have made dealers wary.

  • At first, there is no sign of ivory at all,

  • but then a seller shows us photos of various ornamental carvings.

  • Finally, she begins unpacking small samples from various boxes around the shop,

  • which includes a lady's bracelet.

  • The equivalent of £200.

  • And after chatting for a while, she agrees to email us more images of her stock.

  • We have found that every one legal activity

  • comes with nearly six illegal ivory trading activity.

  • So this domestic market provides opportunity

  • for people to launder illegally-obtained ivory.

  • The dealer comes back as promised and we arrange to meet to see the samples first-hand,

  • again with no intention of buying.

  • Is she really going to deliver so quickly?

  • She brings out two ornamental pen holders.

  • But the biggest item in her stock is an uncarved tusk,

  • the most expensive piece at £4,000.

  • Eventually, she offers 15 items of ivory

  • worth nearly £50,000.

  • All this delivered within just 24 hours of asking.

  • We cut off all contact.

  • And Guangzhou wasn't the only place we were offered large pieces of illegal ivory for sale.

  • In Fuzhou, we were also offered two pieces.

  • Again, it was delivered within hours of our arrival.

  • Now the man who collects the data on the illegal ivory trade

  • concedes the sale to China may have made things worse.

  • Did the allowance of legal ivory to go into China exacerbate a situation?

  • One could probably argue now, with hindsight, that indeed it did.

  • It created perhaps an image in the mind of many potential Chinese consumers

  • that it was OK to buy ivory.

  • The Chinese government did not accept our request for an interview,

  • but in a statement it said it had...

  • It said a range of measures including tougher law enforcement and improved public education put...

  • And any possible breaches

  • shouldn't be used to deny...

  • But from top to bottom, our undercover team found evidence

  • that the rules on ivory sales were being flouted.

  • Even in a state-run shop, ivory was sold without the proper paperwork.

  • It confirmed what many feared - that the legal trade provides a channel

  • for illegal ivory to get onto the market.

  • Some campaigners still see re-education as the key.

  • At the moment in China, there's a lack of awareness

  • of the consequences of buying,

  • but if the buying stops, the killing can, too.

  • Time is running out, though.

  • Last summer, the Kenyan government made a dramatic gesture to try to get the world to take notice

  • of the plight of Africa's elephants.

  • We must send a message out there to all illegal groups

  • that trading wildlife...

  • That wildlife has no value other than the way God had created them to be.

  • 335 tusks

  • and over 40,000 ivory pieces, worth millions of pounds, went up in smoke.

  • It will be tragic for this world to lose the biggest animal on Earth to poachers,

  • for no reason other than their ivory.

  • At the present rate, I don't see it letting up and some countries will lose all their elephants.

  • And that's just tragic.

  • On my journey, I've seen that despite an international ban meant to protect an endangered species,

  • elephants are facing a grave crisis.

  • The question now: if more countries are allowed to sell their ivory, too,

  • will it simply declare open season on all of Africa's elephants?

  • Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd

'The African elephant, the largest animal on Earth, is under threat.

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