Sri
Racha Tiger Farm Busted!
EIA
EIA welcomes the recent spate of enforcement activity in Thailand to
crackdown on the illegal tiger trade.
Some of you may have read about the recent spate of enforcement activity
in Thailand, where a number of high profile raids have revealed a thriving
illegal trade in tiger meat and live tigers! Also raided was Sri Racha
tiger farm, profiled in our report Thailands
Tiger Economy.
EIA welcomes the current enforcement activity and will be campaigning
to ensure that it is not short-lived, but rather forms the basis of long-term
institutional change to ensure the effectiveness of Thailands multi-agency
wildlife crime unit.
Following the release of our report in 2001, EIAs Tiger Team worked
hard to make sure that a special CITES Tiger Technical Mission was dispatched
to Thailand to examine the enforcement problems there.
That Mission took place in August 2002 and the report, which corroborated
many of EIAs concerns, was presented at the 12th Conference of the
Parties to CITES in November 2002 (http://www.cites.org/eng/cop/12/doc/E12-33A.pdf
). The CITES expert report made several recommendations to Thailand on
actions they could take to remedy the situation. This included involving
the Thai Royal Police in a multi-agency specialised wildlife crime unit.
In March 2003, Thailand announced that they had established a task force
to enforce domestic wildlife legislation and CITES.
Thailand is hosting the 13th Conference of the Parties to CITES in October
2004 and it is likely this has contributed to the decision to clean up.
It is important that we support the continued efforts of the Commander
of the Forestry Police Division, who has been leading the recent enforcement
activity. It is also vital that the Thai Royal Police continue to play
a pivotal role in this multi-agency wildlife crime unit.
Unfortunately, the Commander is reportedly coming under fire from the
zoo community who fear that his actions are giving Thailand a bad name
and will affect tourists and visitors. EIA feels this is unwarranted and
that official zoos should have nothing to fear. In fact, the Commander's
enforcement efforts have given Thailand much more credibility and a far
better image.
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