Wildlife custodian, Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS), has urged 32 newly-appointed ambassadors, high commissioners and heads of missions to help the country sustain advocacy on total ban on international ivory and rhino horn trade.
Director General William Kiprono asked the diplomats to help in demand-reduction campaign on wildlife and wildlife products. Ivory, rhino horns, reptiles, pangolins, and sandal wood are some of the wildlife and wildlife products being poached and trafficked for international black markets.
Mr Kiprono wants them to use their diplomatic missions to lobby other countries to help reduce the demand for endangered species.
Africa range states have faced unprecedented poaching in recent past with 302 elephants and 59 rhino poached in year 2013 in Kenya alone. Since the beginning of the year, 116 elephants and 26 rhinos have been lost to poachers.
“In the last six months, however, we have turned the corner and the worst is behind us. We hope to keep the poaching cartels on the run and make them face the fullest extent of the law,” he said.
Among the newly appointed diplomats is former Finance Cabinet Minister Robinson Githae, who becomes the new Kenyan ambassador to the United States while Prof Sam Ongeri heads to UN Habitat. The envoys were appointed in August 2014.