top of page
Writer's pictureEPI Secretariat

Film release: Ethiopia’s Elephant Crisis

The Elephant Protection Initiative Foundation congratulates the Ethiopian Wildlife Conservation Authority (EWCA) on the release of ‘Ethiopia’s Elephant Crisis’, a powerful documentary on its efforts to save its endangered elephants. Since the 1980s, Ethiopia has lost 90% of its elephants, which today are estimated to number less than 1,900. In ‘Ethiopia’s Elephant Crisis’, award-winning filmmaker Antoine Lindley travels to some of the most remote and beautiful corners of Ethiopia to find the few surviving elephants, and to highlight the challenges confronting the brave conservationists struggling to protect them.


Ethiopia’s elephants are threatened by organised ivory poaching, human encroachment into wildlife areas and growing human-elephant conflict.  ‘I made this film to give a voice to Ethiopia’s endangered elephants’, said Antoine Lindley, ‘film is a powerful visual tool that I hope will bring more awareness and solutions’. The EPI’s Greta Iori said ‘from the southern border with Kenya to the northern border with Eritrea, this documentary provides a glimpse into the magnificent landscapes of our country, the devastating threats facing Ethiopia’s elephants, as well as the frontline heroes and community members protecting them, and risking their lives every day. Ethiopia has already lost its rhinos, we owe it to our children to save the last elephants’. 


‘Ethiopia’s Elephant Crisis’ will be officially launched later this year in Addis Ababa, but is already available online and free to view here. The film was made with the support of the UNDP and Global Environment Facility (GEF). 


The EPI is an alliance of 21 African countries with common policies on elephant conservation. Ethiopia was a founding member of the EPI in 2014. EWCA is the Ethiopian federal authority responsible for managing national parks.


For further information on Ethiopia’s elephants, and access to interviewees, please contact the EPI’s Director of Communications, Barnaby Phillips: bphillips@elephantprotectioninitiative.org and +44 777 238 6897. 

Filmmaker: Antoine Lindley: alindley1@aol.com


Photo credit: Timothée Froment, elephant in Chebera Churchura National Park

274 views

Comentarios


bottom of page