| Kenya programs in order to strengthen present easygoing phrases with    regard to guilty animals poachers or even pale yellow smugglers within a bet    in order to eradicate, banish, destroy the surge within hippo killings, the    federal government stated a prior weekend not too long ago. "We intend to fight    poachers at all levels to save our elephants," government spokesman    Muthui Kariuki said in a statement. A major obstacle to this    is that Kenyan courts are currently limited in their powers to jail or fine    those convicted of wildlife crimes, he said. "One of the major    setbacks are lenient penalties and sentencing for wildlife crime by the    courts," he said. "The government is    concerned about this and has facilitated the process of reviewing the    wildlife law and policy with a view to having more deterrent penalties and    jail terms." Poaching has recently risen    sharply in east Africa, with whole herds of elephants massacred for their    ivory. Rhinos have also been targeted. Passing tougher wildlife    laws will be made a priority for Kenya's parliament, elected last month but    which has yet to begin business. "We look forward    to... parliament giving priority to passing of a new wildlife law and    policy," Kariuki added. Kenya's current wildlife    act caps punishment for the most serious wildlife crimes at a maximum fine of    40,000 Kenyan shillings (470 dollars, 365 euros), and a possible jail term of    up to 10 years. Last month, a Chinese    smuggler caught in Kenya with a haul of ivory was fined less than a dollar    (euro) a piece. The smuggler, who was    arrested carrying 439 pieces of worked ivory while in transit in Nairobi as    he travelled from the Democratic Republic of Congo to Hong Kong, was fined    $350 (270 euros) and was then set free. Such fines pose little if    any deterrence, with experts suggesting a kilogramme of ivory has an    estimated black market value of some $2,500. Last year poachers    slaughtered 384 elephants in Kenya, up from 289 in 2011,according to official    figures, from a total population of around 35,000. This year, poachers have    already shot dead 74. Tourism is one of Kenya's    most important foreign currency earners. In addition, a thousand    new wildlife officers "will soon be recruited to beef up the ranger    force" as part of strengthening operations "with a view to stamping    out the poaching menace", Kariuki added. The illegal ivory trade    is mostly fuelled by demand in Asia and the Middle East, where elephant tusks    and rhinoceros horns are used to make ornaments and in traditional medicine. Trade in elephant ivory,    with rare exceptions, has been outlawed since 1989 after elephant populations    in Africa dwindled from millions in the mid-20th century to some 600,000 by    the end of the 1980s. Africa is now home to an    estimated 472,000 elephants, whose survival is threatened by poaching as well    as a rising human population that is encroaching on their habitat. Kenya is also a transit    point for ivory smuggled from across the region. Within Jan, authorities within the Kenyan slot associated with Mombasa    grabbed a lot more than 2 loads associated with pale yellow, that experienced    apparently originate from Tanzania as well as had been meant with regard to    Philippines. | 
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