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COMMUNIQUE DE PRESSE
Governments join forces
through CITES to catch wildlife criminals
The Hague, 7 June 2007 - Recent successes in strengthening
international cooperation on enforcing wildlife laws will feature
prominently at the talks here on the Convention on International
Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).
For example, responding to a call by the Prime Minister of Thailand
for the formation of a 'Wildlife Interpol', Asian governments
created the ASEAN Wildlife Enforcement Network (ASEAN-WEN) in
December 2005. ASEAN-WEN has gone on to build greater collaboration
and coordination between member countries, both at the operational
and strategic levels.
More recently a CITES Enforcement Task Force met in the United
Arab Emirates to discuss the smuggling of falcons. It produced
an identification guide to help customs and other law enforcement
agencies target criminals who remove falcons from the wild, smuggle
them across borders and then sell them illegally for falconry.
Another Enforcement Task Force has met in Kenya at the headquarters
of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) to examine
the illegal trade in great apes. Its efforts are being complemented
by the Great Ape Task Force, which has produced awareness-raising
posters and leaflets to alert border control and police agencies
to criminal activities that threaten these species.
This month's CITES conference will also consider how improved
information sharing amongst Governments has significantly advanced
the struggle against wildlife criminals. For example, last year
customs in Hong Kong S.A.R., China seized a container containing
a large quantity of illegal ivory. Information about the case
was rapidly exchanged with international law enforcement organizations
and with African governments. This enabled the Cameroon authorities
to seize a further two containers that had also been adapted for
smuggling ivory. Arrest warrants have been issued for those involved.
Working closely with Interpol, the World Customs Organization,
regional wildlife law enforcement groups and other UN bodies,
the CITES Secretariat continues to assist countries around the
world with their enforcement efforts, including through an alert
system that provides regular intelligence and risk-assessment
advice. Over the past two years, alerts have been issued on bear
bile, caviar, crocodile skins, invalid CITES documents, ivory,
sea turtle shells and the abuse of diplomatic immunity. The Secretariat
has also conducted in-country work on the illegal trade in ivory,
orangutans and tigers. Delegates in The Hague will be informed
of the recommendations and lessons learned from these various
activities.
Willem Wijnstekers, Secretary-General of CITES, said, "The
wildlife law enforcement successes achieved over the past several
years show what can be achieved when the international community
works together. I am delighted that enforcement will receive such
a high profile in The Hague and that it will feature in the Ministerial
session. Recent advances must not make us complacent, however
- we need to allocate a much higher priority to bringing wildlife
criminals to justice."
Note to journalists: The CITES Secretariat is organizing
a 12h30 press briefing today in the South America room with John
M. Sellar, Senior Officer, Anti-smuggling, Fraud and Organized
Crime, CITES Secretariat; Benito Perez, Acting Chief, Division
of Law Enforcement, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Captain Aroon
Promphan, Natural Resources and Environment Crime Division, Royal
Thai Police; and Peter Younger, Wildlife Crime Programme Officer,
Interpol.
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