Deutsche Welle, 3 March 2013
A UN environment expert has warned that trafficking has put several species of plants and animals in danger of extinction. A conference under way in Bangkok aims to protect polar bears, rays and sharks.
A UN environment expert has warned that trafficking has put several species of plants and animals in danger of extinction. A conference under way in Bangkok aims to protect polar bears, rays and sharks.
Making that
warning to open the 178-nation Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species (CITES), UN Environment Program Executive Director Achim Steiner cited
an upsurge in poaching of Africa's endangered elephants and rhinos. He said the
increase was driven by rising demand in Asia for their tusks and horns, saying
that in some countries poaching has driven the pachyderm population down by
about 11 percent.
"The
backdrop against which this meeting takes place should be a very serious wakeup
call for all of us," Steiner told delegates at a convention center in the
Thai capital. Wildlife trafficking "in a terrible way has become a trade
and a business of enormous proportions - a billion-dollar trade in wildlife
species that is analogous to that of the trade in drugs and arms," Steiner
added. "This is not a small matter. It is driven by a conglomerate of crime
syndicates across borders."
"Blood
ivory" will be at the top of the agenda during the global biodiversity
conference, which lasts until March 14. The conference will look at about 70
proposals, most of which will decide whether member nations increase or lower
the level of protection on various species. CITES has put 35,000 species of
plants and animals under its protection since it formed in 1973.
‘Survival
of the species'
"The
UNEP year book, supported by data from CITES and its Monitoring of the Illegal
Killing of Elephants which is hosted by UNEP in Nairboi, indicates that the
number of elephants that were killed in 2012 ran, as in 2011, into the tens of
thousands," Steiner said in his keynote speech. "Meanwhile a record
668 rhinos were poached in South Africa alone last year."
At the time
CITES formed, the African rhino numbered just 2,000. That number now stands at
25,000, but poaching has become more frequent again.
The culprit
is largely demand from Asia, where their horns are highly desired because they
are believed to have medicinal properties.
CITES
Director-General John Scanlon said the slaughter of African elephants and
rhinos "could threaten the survival of the species themselves,"
blaming poachers, rebel militias and syndicates for trafficking animal parts
internationally.
"This
criminal activity poses a serious threat to the stability and economies of
these countries," Scanlon said. "It also robs these countries of
their natural heritage, their culture heritage, and it undermines good
governance and the rule of law. These criminals must be stopped, and we need to
prepare to deploy the sorts of techniques that are used to combat the trade in
narcotics to do so."
Help from
the hosts
Thailand's
prime minister, Yingluck Shinawatra, said she would amend Thai law "with
the goal of putting an end to the ivory trade," delighting conservationists
who have long urged the kingdom to tackle the rampant smuggling of tusks
through its territory. Activists say criminals exploit Thailand's legal trade
in tusks from domesticated Asian elephants to sell African ivory. According to
the World Wildlife Fund, Thailand is the world's second-largest illegal ivory
market, behind China.
Yingluck
said that the animals are very important for the national culture: "No one
cares more about the elephant than the Thai people., she said. "
Unfortunately, many have used Thailand as a transit country for the illegal
international ivory trade."
Without
giving a timeframe, Yingluck said Thailand would establish tighter controls to
curb illegal flows of ivory and ensure existing ivory supply is from domestic
elephants before legislating for an outright end to the trade.
mkg/msh (AFP, dpa, AP)
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Shark Fin-Hungry China Drives ‘Chaotic’ Fishing in Indonesia
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| A worker dries shark fins in a fishing port in Banyuwangi, East Java, in this June 27, 2008 file photo. (Reuters Photo/Sigit Pamungkas) |
“... Perhaps this is a timely reminder for mankind to respect all life forms. All play a part in the consciousness evolution of man and the planet. As you prepare to enter a year of Unity, of stepping forward in respect of one another, I ask you remember the many kingdoms who also share the planet- the elemental, plant, mineral and animal. I ask you develop a new awareness for these. It is not all about you - the human. No it is not. You must now begin to awaken your consciousness to sharing - with all. For all is part of God's great creation.
Update from Ashtar via Mike Quinsey: Obama’s State of the Union Address – (Ashtar channeled by Susan Leland, February 12, 2013)
“… It is Freedom in every aspect of the lives of all humans on Planet Earth; it is Freedom for the animal and the plant kingdoms, and for the mineral kingdoms who are deemed to serve the humans. You know, it’s the humans who think all of the other kingdoms are here to serve. If you ask members of the other kingdoms what they have to say about that, they would take a different perspective and voice a different point of view which is true and appropriate, and as you like to say, it is high time because we are in High Times and we are continuing on this Path! ..."


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