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File AvailableGriffith, L. 1991 Help WWF stop the rhino horn trade. A WWF campaign report, April 1991. Gland, WWF, pp. i-iii, 1-18
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Species:
World
Trade
All Rhino Species
No details available yet
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File AvailableDaly, M.W. 1991 Imperial Sudan: the Anglo-Egyptian condominium, 1934-1956. Cambridge, University Press, pp. i-xvi, 1-471
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Species:
Africa - Eastern Africa - Sudan
Trade
African Rhino Species
No details available yet
  details

File AvailableMartin, E.B. 1991 Rhino horn: facts and myths. Around the Horn 2 (1): 7-8
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Species:
World
Trade
All Rhino Species
No details available yet
  details

File AvailableMartin, E.B.; Vigne, L. 1991 All countries must comply with CITES ban on international trade in rhino products. Swara 14 (4): 6-7
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Subject:
Species:
Africa
Trade
African Rhino Species
No details available yet
  details

File AvailableMartin, E.B. 1991 The effect of the international ivory bans on Zimbabwe's ivory industry. Swara 14 (6): 26-28
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Species:
Africa - Southern Africa - Zimbabwe
Trade
African Rhino Species
No details available yet
  details

File AvailableChilvers, B. 1990 Rhino's last stand in Africa. REF Journal 3: 12-19, figs. 1-3
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World
Trade
All Rhino Species
In theory, Hong Kong stopped imports in February 1979, Japan in November 1980 and Singapore in October 1986, which might explain why the North Yemen market for rhino horn dropped from a peak of 4 tons (or 1500 dead rhinos) in 1980 to about 400 kg per annum since 1986. (In 1982, Yemen prohibited t...
  details

File AvailableChilvers, B. 1990 Rhino's last stand in Africa. REF Journal 3: 12-19, figs. 1-3
Location:
Subject:
Species:
World
Trade
All Rhino Species
On the supply side, the killing of rhino and trade in horn are illegal practices in all African countries except Burundi, a trading hot spot for rhino and elephant products. All signatories of the first Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) in 1976 banned trade in rhino...
  details

File AvailableChilvers, B. 1990 Rhino's last stand in Africa. REF Journal 3: 12-19, figs. 1-3
Location:
Subject:
Species:
World
Trade
All Rhino Species
On the supply side, the killing of rhino and trade in horn are illegal practices in all African countries except Burundi, a trading hot spot for rhino and elephant products. All signatories of the first Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) in 1976 banned trade in rhino...
  details

File AvailableChilvers, B. 1990 Rhino's last stand in Africa. REF Journal 3: 12-19, figs. 1-3
Location:
Subject:
Species:
World
Trade
All Rhino Species
In theory, Hong Kong stopped imports in February 1979, Japan in November 1980 and Singapore in October 1986, which might explain why the North Yemen market for rhino horn dropped from a peak of 4 tons (or 1500 dead rhinos) in 1980 to about 400 kg per annum since 1986. (In 1982, Yemen prohibited t...
  details

File AvailableChilvers, B. 1990 Rhino's last stand in Africa. REF Journal 3: 12-19, figs. 1-3
Location:
Subject:
Species:
World
Trade
All Rhino Species
Namibia, which is not a signatory to CITES, was the last country to allow trade in rhino horn, but since 1984 has voluntarily complied with CITES, as do the National Republics within South Africa.
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