| For Immediate Release, November 20, 2017 
                            
                              | Contact: | Tanya  Sanerib, Center for Biological Diversity, (206) 379-7363,  [email protected] Kimiko  Martinez, Natural Resources Defense Council, (310) 434-2344, [email protected]
 |  Lawsuit  Challenges Trump Administration's Elephant, 
                          Lion Trophy Import Decisions                           Despite Trump's Tweets, New Trophy Policies Still In  Effect                           WASHINGTON — The Center for Biological  Diversity and Natural Resources Defense Council sued the Trump administration today  for allowing U.S. hunters to import elephant and lion trophies from Zimbabwe.  The lawsuit aims to protect animals and resolve confusion created by the  administration’s contradictory announcements in recent days. The suit comes days after the U.S. Fish  and Wildlife Service abruptly reversed an Obama-era ban on elephant trophy imports  based on catastrophic elephant population declines. Fish and Wildlife also  recently greenlighted lion trophy imports from Zimbabwe, despite the controversial  killing of Cecil the Lion in Zimbabwe in 2015.  After massive public outcry, including  from established Republican politicians and pundits, President Trump and Secretary  of the Interior Ryan Zinke announced a “hold” on issuing elephant trophy import  permits late Friday night. President Trump suggested on Twitter that a new  big-game trophy decision would be forthcoming. Unfortunately, the new federal  policies allowing imports of elephant and lion trophies —  referred to as “positive enhancement findings”  under the U.S. Endangered Species Act — remain in effect. “The Trump administration must clearly  and permanently halt imports of lion and elephant trophies to protect these  amazing animals from extinction,” said Tanya Sanerib, a senior attorney with  the Center for Biological Diversity. “Trump’s abrupt backpedaling after public  outcry, while appreciated, shows how arbitrary this deplorable decision was. These  incredibly imperiled creatures need a lot more than vague promises.”   Today’s suit, filed in the U.S.  District Court for the District of Columbia, notes that the Trump administration  acted arbitrarily in its rush to reverse course and open the United States to  Zimbabwean lion and elephant trophies in a move that is contrary to the  Endangered Species Act.  “Putting trophy imports ‘on hold’  isn’t enough,” said Elly Pepper, deputy director of Wildlife Trade for the  Natural Resources Defense Council. “Elephants are in crisis now. If we don’t  force the Administration to completely revoke its decision, President Trump could  quietly start allowing these imports as soon as he stops facing criticism on  Twitter.” The Trump administration’s decision to  lift the ban on these trophy imports relies heavily upon Zimbabwe having the  plans, resources, funds, and staff to conserve elephant  and lion populations. But, as today’s lawsuit notes, in a country where  corruption is already a huge concern, a military coup that began Nov. 14 has cast  further uncertainty on Zimbabwe’s rule of law. Zimbabwe scored an abysmal 22  out of 100 on Transparency International’s 2016 Corruption Perception Index. Poaching elephants for their ivory  remains a significant threat in Zimbabwe. According to aerial surveys — known  as the Great Elephant Census — Zimbabwe’s elephant population decreased 6  percent between 2001 and 2013, when the aerial surveys were performed. Zimbabwe’s  elephant population is reportedly still in decline, largely due  to poaching.  Zimbabwe’s lion population was estimated at roughly 703 lions in 2014. 
 The Great Elephant Census of savannah  elephants conducted over the past couple of years revealed that fewer than 400,000  savannah elephants (not including the smaller forest elephants in  western-central Africa) remain across the continent. The census results also  documented the loss of 140,000 elephants over seven years due to poaching. In  2016, the IUCN found lions in Africa to be vulnerable to extinction  noting an estimated 43 percent decline of African lion populations over 21  years.
 Studies show  that trophy hunting is only a small portion of the funding all tourists,  including those who do not deplete wildlife populations, provide in African  countries that allow trophy hunting. Meanwhile, corruption in Zimbabwe raises  serious concerns about where trophy hunters’ fees really go, according to  assessments by the Obama administration and a 2016 report from House Natural  Resources Committee.                           Learn more about the Center's work to save African elephants. Learn more about the Center's lawsuits against the Trump administration. |