[FEL-L] Geneva Switzerland Bad 4 Tigers
BigCatSimba at aol.com
BigCatSimba at aol.com
Thu Oct 12 18:38:25 CDT 2006
GENEVA, Switzerland, October 11, 2006 (ENS) - The international community
last week failed to agree on how to halt the illegal trade in tiger parts or how
to curb widespread poaching of the world's largest cat, delaying any new
action until June 2007. The lack of action comes despite new evidence that tigers
are in stark decline and face possible extinction if poaching is not severely
curtailed.
Scientists estimate only 6,000 tigers remain in the wild, although some warn
the figure could be far lower. The species is has lost 40 percent of its
habitat in the past decade. Wild tigers occupy only 7 percent of their historic
range and their remaining habitat is increasingly fragmented and degraded.
There are clear signs poaching has accelerated in recent years, driven by
increasing demand for tiger parts in China and Southeast Asia.
Time may be running out for the world's largest cat. (Photo courtesy Save the
Tigers)
Development and roadbuilding across Indochina is further fragmenting tiger
habitat and the clear cutting of lowland rainforests in Sumatra and Malaysia has
put further pressure on the world's largest cat.
A report to the secretariat of the Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species (CITES) presented at last week's meeting of the treaty's
standing committee said efforts to save the tiger thus far "have failed."
But the committee decided to put off discussion of the tiger crisis again
until next June, when the full CITES body convenes in Holland.
The committee did decide to send a technical enforcement mission from the
CITES Secretariat to China to look into enforcement of this trade, but
conservation groups contend that falls far short given the gravity of the situation.
"We are disappointed by the lack of leadership … and the lack of commitment
to conservation," said Susan Lieberman, director of WWF's global species
Program. "The biggest problem facing tigers today is illegal trade between India and
China, yet neither country showed the willingness to step up efforts to
tackle this urgent problem. How bad does it need to get for tigers before
governments take the necessary action?"
The failure of India and China to enforce laws against poaching and trade in
tiger parts was documented by a new report released last month by two
environmental groups.
The report, compiled by the Environmental Investigation Agency and the
Wildlife Protection Society of India, revealed a thriving trade in China that has
decimated tiger populations in India.
In a report released last month, investigators found brazen disregard for
anti-poaching laws - here a skin wearer posed last month with an enforcement
officer at Litang Horse Festival in China. (Photo courtesy EIA/WPSI)
In the space of just ten days, investigators met 11 traders who offered them
whole tiger and leopard skins. The environmental groups said the traders were
clearly aware of the illegality of their operations, but were unconcerned
about the threat of arrest or disruption by local authorities - one trader even
said that enforcement had decreased in the last two years.
The groups called for a new enforcement agency be set up in India and China
to coordinate efforts to crack down on the trade before it is too late.
According to Steven Broad, executive director of TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade
monitoring network of WWF and the World Conservation Union, a suggestion was
on the table at the standing committee to convene "a high-level law enforcement
meeting with all of the tiger range states and to come up with a process to
measure how well recommendations made by CITES Parties in the late 1990s were
being implemented."
"Instead, the delegates decided to do nothing for nine more months," Broad
said. "The world's tigers can't wait another nine months."
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