appeal for saving endangered animal
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Children born this year might only see the world’s mega fauna in picture books, marvelling at the curiously shaped elephant and rhinoceros and imperial tiger as 20th-century anachronisms.
The killing has gathered pace in the last five years, but it is not too late to save the last of these beasts in the wild. Much rides on what happens this week in London. David Cameron and the Duke of Cambridge will host representatives of 60 states, including China, in the largest-ever conference of its kind to try to stop the £11.5bn-a-year industrial slaughter of global wildlife. The profits are so colossal that militias and terror groups have taken a stake – destabilising the countries involved and visiting fresh horrors upon their people.
Governments have never been more receptive to working together to stop wildlife trafficking. If readers wish to contribute to the effort, make people aware about it and save them