The Hon. Lazaro Nyalandu, Minister of Natural Resources and Tourism |
Wildlife ambassador Jacqueline N Mengi |
WildAid CEO Peter Knights |
DAR ES SALAAM (18 June 2015) — Tanzania's Ministry of Natural
Resources and Tourism, in association with WildAid and the African
Wildlife Foundation, has launched a new public awareness campaign to
inform the public about the severe poaching crisis currently facing
Tanzania and to generate widespread support among civil society for the
protection of elephants and other wildlife species.
The campaign
will use television, radio, social media, newspapers and magazines,
billboards and videos in public spaces in order to reach as many members
of the public as possible, including the residents of remote rural
villages.
Tanzania has lost 60% of its elephants in the past six
years, mainly because of poaching for ivory. Very large profits from
this illegal activity are made in China and other consumer nations,
while Tanzanians are left to bear the cost.
Award-winning
singer-songwriter Alikiba has become an ambassador for the campaign.
"I'm honoured to lend any support that I can to this effort to protect
our wildlife,” Alikiba said. "Our beautiful elephants must
The
campaign also features singer Vanessa Mdee, former NBA player Hasheem
Thabeet and former Miss Tanzania Jacqueline Mengi. They join a host of
international icons including Jackie Chan, Yao Ming, Edward Norton,
Prince William and David Beckham, who are featured in the “Ivory Free”
and “When the Buying Stops, the Killing Can Too” campaigns.
Religious
leaders representing an interfaith coalition — including Muslims,
Catholics, Evangelicals and other Christian denominations — also
recorded messages and offered their support: “We don’t always agree on
everything, but we all agree that poaching and the smuggling of ivory is
completely wrong,” the leaders said in a PSA.
"Elephants are at
the top of the 'wish list' for many tourists who come to this country,
and tourism generates over 17% of our Gross Domestic Product (GDP),”
said The Hon. Lazaro Nyalandu, Minister of Natural Resources and
Tourism. "Our elephants are a great asset to this country in many ways,
and my government is determined to stop the slaughter. But we cannot do
it alone: We want to enlist the help of all of our citizens to stop the
theft of our national heritage.”
A recent WildAid/AWF survey of
over 2,000 Tanzanians in both rural and urban areas found that more than
79% of respondents said that it would matter a great deal to them if
elephants disappeared from Tanzania. Over 73% said that they associated
wildlife with their national identity and heritage.
"Poaching
of elephants literally is theft from all Tanzanians and from future
generations,” said Peter Knights, CEO of WildAid. “We invite all media
to participate in the campaign, and we need everyone to help in the
fight to stop it.”
Dr Patrick Bergin, CEO of the African Wildlife
Foundation, said of the new campaign, “Tanzania has always been known
for its large elephant herds and, together with Botswana and Zimbabwe,
is home to half of all of Africa’s elephants. The current rate of
poaching, however, threatens to erode that distinction. As Tanzanians
learn more about the crisis through the campaign, we hope they will work
with us to protect this tremendous asset.”
Media Contacts
Salome Gasabile, WildAid Tanzania, +255 656 802 548, gasabile@wildaid.org
Andrew Harmon, WildAid (U.S.) +1 415 834 3174, harmon@wildaid.org
Click here for more info on the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust's elephant orphanage.
Andrew Harmon, WildAid (U.S.) +1 415 834 3174, harmon@wildaid.org
Click here for more info on the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust's elephant orphanage.
be allowed to
live — free and wild — instead of ending up as a carving on somebody's
coffee table."
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