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Over 20,000 elephants poached in Africa in 2013: wildlife regulator

An excavator removes the carcass of an elephant after it was killed by poachers at Kothalguri village, in Nagaon district in the northeastern state of Assam on September 25, 2013. Stringer/AFP/Getty Images

GENEVA – An international wildlife regulator says more than 20,000 elephants were poached last year in Africa, where large seizures of smuggled ivory eclipsed those in Asia for the first time.

Officials with the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) say 80 per cent of the African seizures were in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda, three of the eight nations required to draw up action plans to curb ivory smuggling.

But CITES, which banned ivory trade in 1989, says in a report that the overall poaching numbers in 2013 dropped from the previous two years due to better law enforcement and public attention to the problem.

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