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60 result(s) for "Douglas-Hamilton, Iain"
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Save the Elephants founder wins top conservation prize
Twenty-one years after a worldwide ban on ivory trade helped stop the slaughter of African elephants, the demand for ivory seems to be making a comeback - prompting some African countries to propose the sale of tons of stockpiled ivory, while giving poachers a new incentive to slaughter elephants for their valuable tusks. Decades of unfettered poaching that began in the 1960s led to what [Iain Douglas-Hamilton] calls an \"elephant holocaust\" - the number of elephants dropped from about 3.million to 250,000 in Africa and Asia today. \"They promise the money will go back into conservation,\" said Douglas-Hamilton. \"But it's only going to encourage markets as far away as China.\"
Prize to honor founder of Save the Elephants
Decades of unfettered poaching that began in the 1960s led to what [Iain Douglas-Hamilton] calls an \"elephant holocaust\" - the number of elephants dropped from about 3 million to 250,000 in Africa and Asia today. \"They promise the money will go back into conservation,\" said Douglas-Hamilton. \"But it's only going to encourage markets as far away as China.\" \"The plight of the African elephant is intensely personal to Iain,\" said Indianapolis Zoo President Michael Crowther. \"He truly epitomizes what it means to be a hero.\"
It's a just walk on the wild side with Saba Scot Region
  IF YOU know Saba [Iain Douglas-Hamilton] only for her role as a wildlife filmmaker, you're in for a surprise - and one hell of a show - with her tour of Scottish theatres. The dazzling diva of the African bush, star of BBC documentary programmes Big Cat Diary and This Wild Life, gets the spotlight she deserves with the 15-date UK travelling show Saba Douglas-Hamilton: A Life With Elephants. With a travelling show that digs deep into her raison d'etre, which is to help safeguard endangered species for future generations, this bush babe presents a gloriously entertaining and honest portrait of her life. Having enjoyed the kind of freedom that she is now visiting on eldest daughter Selkie, 7 - named after the seals of Raasay - and seven-year-old twins Luna and Mayian, Saba says: \"I wanted my children to have a similar childhood to my own. I want them to know wilderness.