Tanzania
on Friday denied allegations by a campaign group that Chinese officials
smuggled out large amounts of illegal ivory during a state visit by President
Xi Jinping last year.
Foreign
Minister Bernard Membe rejected as "lies" a report by the
Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA), which said members of Xi's large
delegation of businessmen and officials had sent the ivory home in diplomatic
bags on the presidential plane. China has called the allegations
"baseless".
"Claims
that the Tanzanian government neither cares nor takes any action against ivory
smugglers are false," Membe told parliament. "The EIA report is
fabricated... to tarnish the image of our country and our friend, the Chinese
nation."
Poaching
has risen in recent years across sub-Saharan Africa, where well-armed criminal
gangs have killed elephants for tusks and rhinos for horns that are often
shipped to Asia for use in ornaments and medicines.
The
situation has been most dramatic in Tanzania, where the EIA said elephants
"are again being slaughtered en masse to feed a resurgent ivory
trade", with 10,000 killed last year alone. International trade in ivory
has been banned since 1989.
Membe
acknowledged that Tanzania was among the world's major sources of smuggled
ivory, but denied that the Tanzanian and Chinese governments were involved in
the illegal trade. He questioned the timing of the allegations, a week after
Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete made a reciprocal state visit to China.
"Those
who are spreading this cooked up report are jealous of China's success. They
want to be the only ones doing trade with China, getting loans from China and
attracting investors from China," said Membe. "Tanzania is a sovereign
country, we will not be forced to choose our friends."
Tanzania
and China signed investment deals worth more than US$1.7 billion during
Kikwete's visit to Beijing last month. The president said this week that China
was his country's "all weather friend".
In
recent years, Chinese companies have signed deals to build a US$1.2 billion gas
pipeline and a US$3 billion coal and iron ore mine project in Tanzania.
Opposition
leaders in the east African country called for an investigation into the
allegations to be conducted by an international panel.
"If the reports are
established to be false, action should be taken against those who made the
allegations. But if the allegations are proven true, stern diplomatic measures
should be taken against our Chinese friends," said opposition politician
Zitto Kabwe.
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