China Pulverizes Ivory to Combat Illegal Trade

Carvings and tusks destroyed as a message to smugglers and elephant poachers.

At a wildlife rescue and rehabilitation center in a Beijing suburb, forestry and customs officials displayed a pile of ivory ornaments, carvings and tusks. They then fed them into machines, which pulverized them. Officials say this is the third public destruction of confiscated elephant ivory in China since 2014.

Black market sales of ivory in China, though, are still rampant. Customs in the eastern city of Hangzhou announced Thursday that they have confiscated nearly 600 pounds of smuggled ivory since last June . One woman was caught hiding the products inside boxes of red wine and chocolate in her hand luggage, according to the People’s Daily Online report.