Illegal tortoiseshell Jewelry Cuba – Save the Ocean Jewelry

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Illegal tortoiseshell Jewelry Cuba

An old warehouse at the Port of Havana that’s been transformed into a tourist market. The cavernous shopping hotspot caters to international visitors, including the increasing numbers dumped off by cruise ships. Entering through historic archways, souvenir hunters wander around the village of tiny gray stalls, bombarded by endless options of Che T-shirts, wooden carvings and lightweight dresses. The stalls are decorated with individual touches, welcome mats and wind chimes beckoning the fanny-pack clad tourists to stay awhile.

Many of the stalls are devoted to souvenir jewelry: inexpensive beads, mother-of-pearl bracelets, coral necklaces, coconut barrettes carefully placed on shelves. At a jewelry stall tucked into the center of the market, the shopkeeper senses a customer’s disinterest in those items and makes one last attempt at a sale.

“You like tortoiseshell?” she asks.

Reaching under her display shelves to open white cabinets that line the bottom of the stall, she pulls out bag after bag of tortoiseshell goods.

She offers a small bracelet for $10 CUCs, or Cuban Convertible Pesos. Then she begins to pull out hair combs, offering a small comb for $5 CUC, a medium for $10, a large one for $15 CUC. Her eyes constantly flit toward the aisle as she fans out tortoiseshell combs, making sure no one is watching. She pulls out piles of thin tortoise bangles and large necklaces, and finally an elaborate necklace and earring set for $50 as she tries to close the deal.

When her customer instead chooses a pair of mother-of-pearl earrings common in all the other stalls, she hangs her head. She shoves the tortoiseshell bags back into their hiding place under totes and boxes, and closes the cabinet with a sharp click.

Beautiful and pliable, sea turtle shells have been fashioned into jewelry and hair combs, glasses and guitar picks for as long as people have used those items. That’s especially true for critically endangered hawksbills and their stunning marbled brown and yellow shells.

Hawksbills were declared endangered 35 years ago by international scientists after they were hunted to near-extinction. The Cuban government allowed the harvest of 500 hawksbills a year until 2008, when global pressure finally put an end to the legal hunt and trade. But the Port of Havana jewelry booth is just one indication that sea turtles are still poached and sold in Cuba.

A recent survey of hawksbill items for sale throughout Latin America and the Caribbean including Cuba identified more than 10,000 tortoiseshell products in more than 200 locations. The study, released earlier this month by the U.S.-based Too Rare To Wear campaign, found illegal merchandise for sale in about a third of the stores visited in nine countries.

Cuba’s numbers were higher, with hawksbill artifacts reported at nearly half of the stores visited. But the report also pointed out that Cuba is one of the few countries surveyed cracking down on the sale of hawksbill items.

Wildlife advocates inside and outside Cuba say illegal hunting and sales of turtles – tortugas – and other endangered species are related to poverty. The average Cuban’s take-home pay is approximately $20 a month, according to the Brookings Institution, so many people scramble for additional sources of income. The turtle trinkets fetch up to $200, which can feed children and improve lives.

Likewise, poaching remains a problem in Cuba because the pay is good. At the same time, the fines for killing imperiled species such as turtles and crocodiles are low, said Yoandys Garcia, a nature guide at Zapata National Park on the nation’s south coast.

For these reasons, working on the demand side can be more effective than chasing the poachers and shutting down the shopkeepers, said Brad Nahill, founder of the Too Rare to Wear Campaign. The idea is to educate tourists on the environmental impact of purchasing hawksbill goods.

From ordering crocodile meat to buying tortoiseshell necklaces, too many tourists in Cuba do become swept up in the novelty and decide not to question where the materials came from, Garcia said. Environmental consciousness is left at home with forgotten sunglasses. “They only care that OK, it’s nice, it’s beautiful, I want to have it for my own,” he said.

The Alamacenes de José, an old warehouse full of souvenir booths at the Port of Havana. (photo by Bailey LeFever)

The Too Rare To Wear campaign provides those bound for Caribbean and Latin American countries with guidelines on how to identify tortoiseshell goods and encourages them to sign a pledge to refrain from wearing and purchasing the tainted jewelry. The campaign aims to kill the industry from the outside in by drying up the market. In the coming months, the campaign will target cruise ships to reach travelers directly. Too Rare To Wear will also partner with local organizations in tourism hotspots to conduct local campaigns, Nahill said.