I long for a time when CITES decisions and national enforcement on the ground are sufficient to provide a safety net that allows wild tiger populations to recover and tiger poachers and tiger parts profiteers to be deterred from plying their deadly trade.
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Since 1993 CITES Parties have recognised that trade bans alone are insufficient to demonstrably deter the trade in tiger parts. Additional, measurable and powerful other actions are essential. Among them: eliminating domestic trade, destroying stockpiles of tiger parts and products, and stopping once and for all the intensive commercial breeding of tigers for trade.
For many tiger range states, the focus of time and money has been on protecting tigers in the wild. This includes funding wildlife law enforcement agencies targeting criminals engaged in tiger trade, and dismantling the criminal networks that back these insidious individuals.
While millions of dollars have been invested in enforcement and other demand-reduction strategies to reach consumers, there has been a growth in operations — some legal, some illegal — breeding tigers for trade in parts and products, undermining those vital field efforts.
And even where police action is effective in making seizures and arrests, the criminal justice system may not fully prosecute or punish offenders.
Legal domestic trade in captive tiger parts stimulates a dangerous demand that imperils wild tigers everywhere. This legal trade also undermines the will of the CITES Parties in Resolution Conference 12.5 and Decision 14.69. This decision makes it quite clear that tigers should not be bred for the trade in their parts and products.
Since 2007, however, there has been insufficient reporting by relevant Parties to demonstrate compliance. Evidenced most recently in the lack of reporting to the CITES Secretariat in response to a request for information on how many facilities there are, how many tigers are in those facilities, how big are the stockpiles of tiger parts and products, and why are they being kept? What steps are being taken to phase out the operations that are engaged in breeding for trade?
We believe that these questions must be answered immediately and that CITES Parties must remain vigilant on the tiger issue. As long as the tiger is at risk in the wild, as long as the tiger is bred in captivity for commercial trade, as long as there are fewer than 4,000 tigers remaining in the wild, CITES Parties must speak unequivocally on this issue. Action at every level is needed.
Blogging off,
Will