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Eighty percent of the African seizures were in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda, three of the eight nations required to draw up plans to curb ivory smuggling, officials with the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) reported.
The report says poaching is increasing in Central African Republic, but declining in Chad. But CITES, which regulates 35,000 species of plants and animals and which banned ivory trade in 1989, says the overall poaching numbers in 2013 dropped from the previous two years.
"We are seeing better law enforcement and demand-reduction efforts across multiple countries, as well as greater political and public attention to this unfolding crisis," said John Scanlon, the CITES secretary-general.
About 28 percent of Africa's elephants are in eastern Africa, but most of them — close to 55 percent — are in southern Africa. Some populations of elephants continue to face an immediate threat of local extinction.
The BBC notes that though the overall poaching levels in 2013 declined, the report found that poaching levels exceeded the elephant birth rate, posing a serious threat to the survival of Africa's elephants. CITES Secretary-General John E Scanlon said "Africa's elephants continue to face an immediate threat to their survival from high levels of poaching for their ivory," according to the BBC report. More from the report can be found in a press release from CITES.
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