President Uhuru Kenyatta will preside over the event in which 105 tonnes of ivory and 1.35 tonnes of rhino horns will be set ablaze, this according to KWS Species Conservation and Management boss Patrick Omondi.
The stockpile to be burnt is an accumulation of ivory from 1989, in a national inventory done for the first time in Kenya last year, which helped determine the number of rhino horns and ivory and their location.
Some of the world’s leading conservation groups are rooting for enforcement of laws and serious legal measures against well connected individuals, feeding the illicit ivory trade.
On Thursday, the KWS revealed that a total of twenty-one seizures have been made by the KWS Canine Unit at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) from January to April 4th, 2016.
The seized miscellaneous trophies include ivory, pangolin scales, wildlife skins, and teeth among others.
According to the statement, majority of those arrested trafficking the illegal trophies are from China, with others from Vietnam, and Malaysia.