Guest guest Posted May 5, 2004 Report Share Posted May 5, 2004 From another list. INTELLIGENCE PANEL: OK for tiger export deemed 'an offence' Published on May 4, 2004 Plodprasop backed plan for financial gain, subcommittee alleges A National Intelligence Agency (NIA) subcommittee has ruled unanimously that Natural Resource and Environment Ministry permanent secretary Plodprasop Suraswadi committed a serious offence by approving the export of 100 tigers to China in 2002 for commercial use, a source said yesterday. The subcommittee headed by NIA chief Pol Lt-General Jumpol Manmai reached the ruling last Thursday after gathering evidence from those involved in the shipments of 100 tigers to China in December 2002. The panel said that documents submitted by Sri Racha Tiger Zoo Co Ltd failed to prove that they exported tigers for breeding purposes, with no business gain involved. In accordance to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), the committee said the company must prove that it did not gain as a business from the export of 100 Bengal tigers to Sanya Maitree Concept Co Ltd of China. " The company's evidence was insufficient to prove that the export was for breeding purposes. Thus government officials involved in approving the tiger export are guilty of malfeasance for conspiring with the company for wrongful approval [the export tiger],'' the source alleged. Apart from Plodprasop, Manop Lohprasert, the Forestry Department's CITES office chief, and MR Bhadharajaya Rajani, deputy director-general of the Royal Forestry Department, were also accused of malfeasance for involvement in approving export of the tigers. Plodprasop, then Forestry Department director-general, claimed that section 26 of the Endangered Species Act of 1992, stipulates that it is legitimate to export to public zoos wildlife for the purposes of surveying, research, conservation and breeding. He threatened to file a legal suit against those that accused him of approving the transfer of tigers was for personal gain. Deputy prime minister Suwit Khunkitti then appointed the NIA to investigate the allegation after both the Senate and the Lower House probed the tiger-purchase deal and concluded that Plodprasop had violated the law in approving the tigers' export for non-research purposes. The House committee on wildlife protection in December last year visited Hainan and found that Sanya Maitri Concept Co Ltd bought the 100 Bengal tigers from the privately run Sri Racha Tiger Zoo for Bt100,000 each to keep and show in a zoo with admission fees. Maitree Temsiriphong, chairman of Sri Racha Tiger Zoo Co Ltd had said his company and the governor of Hainan in China jointly established Sanya Maitree Concept Co Ltd hoping to build the world's biggest tiger-breeding centre in Hainan. Besides tigers from Thailand, he said tigers from Indonesia, Germany and the United States were also sent to China for the same purpose. http://nationmultimedia.com/page.news.php3?clid=3 & id=113054 & usrsess=1 Lynette Shanley Animal Defenders Primates for Primates Wild Cats Plus Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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