Setting the pyre aflame in a sandy square in Cameroon's capital, Samantha Power, America's UN ambassador, joined Cameroonian officials in hailing the ceremony as symbolic of their commitment to win the war against illegal smuggling of animal products.
Central Africa's forest elephants have declined in number by two-thirds between 2002 and 2012.
"All of our countries can and must do more," Power said. The burning sends a clear message, she added, that "the only place ivory belongs and the only value ivory has is on elephants."
What's certain is the merchandise was worth millions of dollars. The pyre will burn for three days.
Also Read
Philip Ngole Ngwese, Cameroon's minister of forestry and wildlife, said the seized tusks and ivory, much of which originated abroad, were now "beyond reach." He also described the human costs of poaching, mourning several guides and park rangers who have been killed in recent years.
Cameroon's biggest city, Douala, is a port through which much of the region's trafficked goods transit overseas. Power, on a weeklong trip to promote the battle against the Muslim extremist group Boko Haram, also met President Paul Biya and other senior Cameroonian officials.
Power, making the first trip to the country by a US Cabinet member in a quarter-century, stressed the need for Cameroonian soldiers to exercise restraint amid reports they've sometimes targeted civilians.
"Any fight against terrorism has to be comprehensive," she said, echoing remarks she made in Cameroon's embattled north yesterday. Political inclusiveness, good governance, economic development and combatting extremism at the grassroots level, she said, "are every bit as critical as one's military campaign itself.