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Kenya’s ivory pyre to spread awareness about elephant poaching
April 29, 2016 1:08:04 pm- 1 / 6
Kenyan authorities have built towering pyres of more than 100 tons of elephant tusks that will be burned on Saturday, in what wildlife officials believe will be the largest single destruction of ivory in history. The Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) has stacked 105 tons of ivory consisting of 16,000 tusks, and 1 ton of rhino horn, in preparation for it to be torched on Saturday to encourage global efforts to help stop the poaching of elephants and rhinos.
Maasai in ceremonial dress stand next to one of around a dozen pyres of ivory, in Nairobi National Park, Kenya Thursday, April 28, 2016. (AP Photo)- 2 / 6
In front of the tusks are illegal ornaments made from ivory, such as a Chinese warrior on horseback with his fist in the air. (AP Photo)
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As local conservation groups and media visited the ivory-burning site in Nairobi National Park on Thursday, workers were putting the finishing touches to the stacks of ivory as rangers from the Kenya Wildlife Service stood guard nearby. (AP Photo)
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The ivory is now piled into some dozen giant pyres, ready to be lit when the Giants Club wildlife summit being held in Laikipia ends on Saturday. (AP Photo)
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A mixture of diesel and kerosene will be pumped through pipes into each pyre, creating a sufficiently high temperature to incinerate the ivory, a process expected to last many days before everything is reduced to ashes.
A KWS ranger adjusts the positioning of tusks on one of around a dozen pyres of ivory. (AP Photo)- 6 / 6
The 105 tons of ivory and over 1 ton of rhino horn were transported in shipping containers from across Kenya, representing the vast majority of the country's stockpile. Conservationists worry that there is a a real threat of elephants becoming extinct in the next 50 years because of poaching bankrolled by the illegal trade in ivory, fueled especially by demand in China.
KWS workers carry elephant tusks from shipping containers as they stack it into pyres Wednesday, April 20, 2016. (AP Photo)