What happened to the Rishi Sunak I knew at school?
Sir: Writing in his Notes (24 October) that ‘If we want to save the elephant, we must legalise the ivory trade’, Charles Moore has bumped into one small part of a complex beast and guessed the wrong conclusion.
The truth is that the global trade in ivory is finished. In February last year, five African leaders launched the Elephant Protection Initiative, which calls for domestic ivory markets to be closed in line with the 1989 ban on international trade (which marked the collapse of western markets). Among them are Botswana and Gabon, which have the world’s largest remaining savannah and forest elephant populations. Five more countries have now joined, including Kenya. And the world’s two largest ivory markets, China and the US, agree. On 25 September, Presidents Obama and Xi announced that they will close their ivory markets, and the US has already stopped all import and export.
That is not to say that the poaching crisis is not acute. It is. My inbox is constantly bombarded with the fallout from the illegal trade: dead elephants, dead people, corruption and serious organised crime. Now is not the time for muddled thinking.
The future of both elephants and rural communities across Africa depends on peace, security and tourism dollars. That future depends on us acting now to protect living elephants, not dead ivory. Alexander Rhodes CEO, Stop Ivory, London SW7
Deradicalise Corbyn
Sir: Nick Cohen calls for the conversion from far-leftists into social democrats of 250,000 Corbyn supporters (‘Converting the Corbyn cult’, 31 October). Surely it would be simpler to convert Mr Corbyn himself? The Home Office has had considerable success in deradicalising jihadists through their ‘Channel’ programme; could not their proven technique be applied to Mr Corbyn? Mike Gross Braunton, Devon
Forty is a male problem, too
Sir: I was amused to read Melissa Kite’s protests about the sexism that women over 40 suffer in the workplace (‘Forty is a feminist issue’, 31 October). I was forced out of the teaching profession by left-wing management, and can assure her that changing careers as a man is no picnic either. I have been unable to find employment for two years because I am ‘too old’ — at 46. I have, in searching for jobs, encountered a considerable number of positions advertised as ‘female candidates only need apply’, a stricture I have never seen applied to men. It is also worth noting that until recently women were allowed to retire five years earlier than men, despite the fact that they live longer. Where were the feminists’ cries about ‘sexism’ then? Finbarr O’Keeffe Reading, Berkshire
Bile and Frost
Sir: Richard Ingrams’s review of Sir David Frost’s biography (Books, 31 October) dripped with bile. Yet he makes some very sound points about the beatification of Frostie, a figure whose reputation is most unlikely to survive his memorial in Westminster Abbey.
It is good to know that Ingrams retains his fierce passion and indignation. But his subject would, I am sure, have been amused — and unperturbed — by his adversary’s vituperation. Tom Blackett West Byfleet, Surrey
Gwynne’s grammar test
Sir: Because of the demanding nature of my grammar test (Diary, 17 October), the answers really need to be accompanied by supporting explanations — what follows is only the bare-bones version.
The test: give the parts of speech, including the grammatical part of any verbs, of ‘boiling’ and every instance of ‘washing’ in the sentence, ‘She is washing in boiling water yesterday’s washing in the washing machine that she uses for washing clothes.’
The answers. ‘Boiling’: present participle (verb-adjective). First ‘washing’: taken with ‘is’, continuous present tense, active voice and indicative mood. By itself, present participle. Second ‘washing’: either gerund (verbal noun) or gerundive. Third ‘washing’: noun acting as an adjective (‘noun-adjective’). Fourth ‘washing’: gerund, acting both as a noun and as a transitive verb.
A fuller discussion of the answers will be on my website, gwynneteaching.com. I have provisionally chosen the winner, but, because I do not claim infallibility, the announcement will be made next week, just in case anyone should wish to dispute any of the above answers in the meantime. N.M. Gwynne Co. Wexford, Ireland
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