Guest guest Posted February 11, 2002 Report Share Posted February 11, 2002 http://www.newsday.com/news/printedition/ny-wobord102582860feb10.story?coll=ny%2\ Dnews%2Dprint Tough Times for Afghan Animal Traders By Matthew McAllester STAFF CORRESPONDENT February 10, 2002 Peshawar, Pakistan - When Mohammed Rafeeq hands you his multicolored business card, he first shows you the side with the photograph of an imperious-looking white falcon gazing into the distance. Turn it over, and there's a reclining tiger just below Rafeeq's job title: Falcon Birds & Animals Importer and Exporter. The message is clear. He can get you just about whatever rare creature you want. Only, not right now. Recent months have been disastrous for Rafeeq and the dozens of other traders in rare birds and animals in Pakistan and Afghanistan. It's been awfully good for falcons, though. First of all, September and October are the trapping months for those who want to catch falcons migrating from Siberia to warmer climes. Unfortunately for the trappers and smugglers, there was a war just then in Afghanistan, so snaring falcons became dangerous. The worse disaster for illegal traders was the fall of the Taliban regime. Taking a tax of $250 per hooked beak, the Taliban let the smugglers ship unlimited numbers of falcons and other precious birds and animals to the United Arab Emirates, where wealthy buyers from around the world fuel a huge, barely monitored market for rare and endangered species. " Our business will be finished if the new government has a different policy, " said Rafeeq, 30, sitting in his home in Peshawar last month, heavy metal videos and American wrestling shows playing on his television in the background. " We could have to start another business. " " It's not just us. There are thousands of dealers who will suffer, " said his friend and mentor, Gholam Mohammed, 53. While pleased that the highly profitable trade appears to be largely arrested, local and international conservation officials and experts are not so sure that Rafeeq and his colleagues will not be back in business soon. " The general feeling now, as with any other area that's experiencing civil strife and war, is that there might be a temporary loss of control and opening up of routes again, " said Sabri Zain, a spokesman for the World Wildlife Fund. Until the fall, Rafeeq's was a steady business. He had people in Afghanistan - and to a lesser extent in his homeland, Pakistan - who trapped the hundreds of falcons and other birds he sold each year. Trappers sometimes would send a less valuable bird of prey into the sky - a bird with modifications. Its eyes would be sewn shut and to its legs would be attached tangled cotton loops and a lure that looked like captured prey. A passing falcon would see the blinded bird, swoop down to steal its seeming food and find itself snared by the loops. The two birds would tumble to the ground. Another method, Rafeeq and Mohammed said, was to tie a pigeon or other small, tasty bird to the ground, surrounded by a web of cotton loops. Smugglers used Ariana Airlines, Afghanistan's national carrier, to smuggle captured birds to Dubai, the regional hub for the trade. Wealthy Arab sheikhs and businessmen hunt with falcons as enthusiastically as some Western tycoons race thoroughbreds. A top-quality bird can go for more than $30,000, Rafeeq said. Mumtaz Malik, the chief conservator for wildlife in the region that includes Peshawar, said such prices can reach $80,000. The hunger for falcons in the United Arab Emirates and neighboring countries appears to outweigh concerns for the long-term survival of the birds. The Emirates' restrictions on the trade of rare animals and plants are minimal. The body that oversees the main global treaty regulating trade in endangered species - called by its acronym, CITES - recently recommended that signatory nations cease trading in wildlife with the Emirates. Afghanistan long has been an even more hopeless case, said John Sellar, a senior enforcement officer in Geneva for CITES. (The body's full name is the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Flora and Fauna.) " As far as we are aware, Afghanistan has never implemented the convention effectively " despite having signed it, he said. " We are not aware of Afghanistan ever having engaged in any legal trade. " Malik said Pakistan allows a limited and licensed trade of saker falcons, as is permitted under the convention, but forbids all dealing in the rarer peregrine falcons. But he acknowledged that alongside the legal trade exists - or did exist, until October - a very large smuggling operation in falcons. The Pakistani authorities cannot prevent what dealers like Rafeeq do inside Afghanistan. 2002, Newsday, Inc. Send FREE Valentine eCards with Greetings! http://greetings. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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