Leading ivory trade investigator murdered in Kenya

Esmond Bradley-Martin, an expert on the illegal ivory trade, has been found stabbed to death in his house in Nairobi. File picture: Brian Inganga/AP

Esmond Bradley-Martin, an expert on the illegal ivory trade, has been found stabbed to death in his house in Nairobi. File picture: Brian Inganga/AP

Published Feb 5, 2018

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Nairobi - A prominent American investigator

of the illegal ivory and rhino horn trade has been found dead in

his Nairobi home with a stab wound in his neck, media reported.

Esmond Bradley-Martin, 75, had spent decades tracking the

movement of animal products, mostly from Africa to markets in

Asia.

"It's a very big loss for conservation," said Paula Kahumbu,

chief executive of Wildlife Direct, an organisation focused on

protecting elephants in Kenya.

He had been about to publish a report exposing how the ivory

trade had shifted from China to neighbouring countries, Kahumbu

added.

The former UN special envoy for rhino conservation was

found in his home on Sunday afternoon, friends said.

Bradley-Martin's research was instrumental in China's

decision to ban its legal rhino horn trade in 1993. It also

pressured China to end legal ivory sales, a ban that came into

force on January 1.

"His work revealed the scale of the problem and made it

impossible for the Chinese government to ignore," said Kahumbu.

He was an expert on the prices of ivory and rhino horn,

leading undercover investigations into markets in China and

Southeast Asia.

He is the second prominent conservationist to die in East

Africa in the past year. South African Wayne Lotter, whose work

targeted ivory smuggling from Africa to Asia, was shot dead in

Tanzania in August.

There was no immediate comment from police. 

Reuters

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