With
momentum building to finally stop the illegal ivory trade and end the
years-long poaching war on elephants, a global team of celebrities and
conservation groups led by WildAid has launched #JoinTheHerd, a new social movement to make 2016 the year when more African elephants are born than killed.
Actors,
musicians, authors and athletes "joining the herd" Thursday on social
media represent five continents and include Academy Award-winning
actress Lupita Nyong’o, Yao Ming (former NBA star), Yoko Ono, Ian
Somerhalder (Vampire Diaries) & Nikki Reed (The Twilight Saga), Alikiba (Tanzanian music artist), Lang Lang (virtuoso pianist), Maggie Q (Nikita and Scandal), Sir
Trevor McDonald (British news presenter), Bo Derek (actress and
longtime WildAid ambassador), Kristin Bauer (actress, HBO’s True Blood), Laurie David (American environmental activist), Tony Jaa (Furious 7), Amy Tan (author, The Joy Luck Club), and Li Bingbing (China’s most famous actress).
Launched
internationally in both English and Mandarin, the campaign encourages
anyone who cares about elephants to #JoinTheHerd by changing their
social media profile photo at YearoftheElephant.org or
even learn to say the greeting in Chinese. To coincide with the
upcoming Chinese New Year, visitors to the website are encouraged to
join a cast of celebrities in wishing their social media friends and
followers a “Happy Year of the Elephant” — a new twist on welcoming the
Chinese Zodiac’s Year of the Monkey on February 8.
WildAid Ambassador and Academy Award-winning actress Lupita Nyong'o's #JoinTheHerd photo
This
week’s social media blitz is the first in a year-long series of
international campaign activities for Year of the Elephant, including
celebrity-hosted events, rallies, and design and photography
competitions to celebrate elephants and ensure that the world’s illicit
ivory trade is shut down, once and for all.
For
nearly a decade, rising consumer demand for ivory has fueled a poaching
epidemic throughout Africa — decimating forest and bush elephants
alike, leaving baby elephants without their mothers, and stripping local
communities of desperately-needed tourism revenue. Meanwhile, militant
groups have profited from the ivory trade, creating regional instability
and strife. An estimated 33,000 African elephants are killed every year
for their tusks.
But in just a few short months, world leaders
have finally charted a course to ending the crisis. In September,
President Barack Obama and President Xi Jinping agreed to phase out
commercial ivory sales in the United States and China — an accord that
also depends upon the closure of the Hong Kong market, which caters
overwhelmingly to visitors from mainland China, the world’s largest
ivory market.
The Hong
Kong government has been a fierce supporter of its large domestic ivory
trade. With international criticism mounting, however, last month Hong
Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying made a stunning announcement: The
government will work to ban the local ivory market.
To make 2016
the Year of the Elephant, the #JoinTheHerd movement is calling upon the
worldwide closure of ivory markets and is asking the US, China and Hong
Kong to provide specific details and a detailed timeline for phasing of
ivory sales.
#JointheHerd and Year of the Elephant were created by WildAid and Grey London in partnership with Lovesocial in New York.
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