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For use of the media only;
not an official document.
PRESS RELEASE
CITES to decide wildlife trade
rules and promote conservation
Agenda includes turtles, elephants,
whales,
seahorses, vicuñas, and mahogany
(Click here
to download the Press Kit )
Santiago, October 2002 - Decisions affecting the survival of dozens
of wild plant and animal species will be adopted at a major conference
here of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species
of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).
The conference, which runs from 3 to 15 November, will consider
59 proposals to amend the lists of species subject to trade controls.
The proposals range from the highly charismatic minke whale and
African elephant, to endangered Asian freshwater turtles and Latin
American parrots, to commercially valuable bigleaf mahogany and
Patagonian toothfish (Chilean sea bass).
"CITES seeks to promote a healthier and more sustainable relationship
between people and wildlife," said CITES Secretary-General
Willem Wijnstekers. "The Santiago conference is an opportunity
to ensure that trade does no harm to plant and animal species. It
will also address national efforts to conserve species that are
not traded because they have become threatened or endangered,"
he said.
"Protecting wildlife is vital to the broader goal of making
environmental conservation and poverty reduction mutually supportive,"
said Klaus Töpfer, Executive Director of the United Nations
Environment Programme, which administers the CITES Secretariat.
"Its well-honed regulations and practical programmes put CITES
on the front line of sustainable development."
One group of proposals addresses Asia's declining freshwater turtles,
which are collected and traded as pets, food, and medicinal preparations
in Asia. The number of turtles on sale at Chinese food markets alone
is estimated between 12 and 20 million specimens annually, most
of them originating from the wild. Experts fear that many Asian
turtle species will soon face extinction. The conference will consider
proposals for introducing trade controls on 26 species of freshwater
turtles.
Another high-profile item is the African elephant. After an eight-year
ban on ivory sales, in 1997 CITES agreed to allow three African
countries - Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe -to make one-time sales
from their existing legal stocks of raw ivory. The ivory - which
weighed 49,574 kg and represented 5,446 tusks - was sold to Japan
in 1999 and earned some USD5 million. The funds were used for elephant
conservation activities in the three range States.
This year, the three countries plus South Africa and Zambia are
proposing one-off sales of existing ivory stocks to be followed
later by annual quotas. The proposals are for a first sale of 20,000
kg and an annual quota of 4,000 kg for Botswana, 10,000 kg and 2,000
kg respectively for Namibia, 30,000 and 2,000 for South Africa and
10,000 and 5,000 for Zimbabwe. Zambia is proposing a one-off sale
of 17,000 kg. A proposal from India and Kenya, on the other hand,
argues that further ivory sales from African elephants should be
clearly prohibited as a precautionary measure for reducing future
threats to the elephant.
Meanwhile, Japan is seeking to open up trade in most northern hemisphere
populations of minke whale and a Pacific population of Bryde's whale.
Its proposals stress the use of national legislation and DNA identification
of individual whales to monitor catches and trade. Similar proposals
were presented without success at the most recent CITES conferences
in 1997 and 2000. This year's debate is likely to involve issues
related to science, sustainable use, possible enforcement problems,
and the International Whaling Commission's moratorium on commercial
whaling.
Other proposals emphasize the sustainable use of wildlife. Sustainable
use can build support for conservation among local communities while
directly raising funds for protecting endangered species. For this
reason, Argentina, Bolivia and Chile want to expand their ability
to sell the fine silky wool sheared from live vicuña to include
a number of additional vicuña populations.
The meeting will also review measures for improving protection
for highly endangered species already protected by CITES regulations,
including rhinoceroses, bears, the tiger, musk deer, sturgeons,
the Tibetan antelope and leopards.
CITES was adopted in 1973 in Washington D.C. and will celebrate
its 30th anniversary next year on 3 March 2003.
Note to journalists:
For media inquiries from 23 October, please contact Juan Carlos
Vasquez or Michael Williams in Santiago at +56-2-2745810. For media
inquiries before that date please contact in Geneva Juan Carlos
Vasquez at +41-22-917-8156 or juan.vasquez@unep.ch, or Michael Williams
at +41-22-9178242/244/196, +41-79-409-1528 (cell) or michael.williams@unep.ch.
Official documents for the meeting,
the Convention itself, and the
Appendices with their complete listings are posted on the Internet
at www.cites.org.
Press accreditation
is now open. For more information and to submit the on-line form,
see www.cites.org. Press working
facilities will be available at the conference, and a large number
of press conferences will be organized by both governments and organizations
during the meeting.
To read previous press releases, go to Archives.
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