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Asia makes strides in protecting wildlife, but some species appear doomed

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http://www.terradaily.com/2005/050626021615.v44muir1.html

 

Asia makes strides in protecting wildlife, but some species appear doomed

 

SINGAPORE (AFP) Jun 26, 2005

The struggle to protect Asia's endangered wildlife has enjoyed rare

progress over recent years but government inaction means many species

are still doomed to extinction, activists meeting last week in Singapore

said.

 

The rising wealth of Asians is one focus of hope, the founder of the

Hong Kong-based Animals Asia Foundation, Jill Robinson, told AFP on the

sidelines of the Asia for Animals Conference.

 

" A lot of people with money in their pockets use it very, very wisely to

educate their children to become more informed about environmental and

animal welfare issues, " Robinson said. " It's those sort of people that

we have to work very hard to reach. "

 

However Robinson described the phenomenon of Asia's newly rich as a

" double edged sword " .

 

" People with more money in their pockets want to spend it on more

outrageous things and usually those outrageous things become the fur off

an animal's back, or shark's fin (soup) or tiger bone, something that

exploits wild and endangered species, " she said.

 

Tougher law enforcement, mainly by imposing stiff penalties and

punishments for those in the supply chain, as well as getting the

region's authorities to mount a joint effort are vital next steps,

according to the activists.

 

" What we have to do is to stop the supply, " said the founder and

president of the Visakha Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in

India, Pradeep Kumar Nath.

 

" So the Indian authorities, the Chinese, the Japanese and all these

other people should come together and form a core group, a task force

only for this purpose. "

 

At a regional summit in Bangkok last year, Southeast Asian nations

agreed to coordinate efforts to crack down on the region's booming

illegal wildlife trade, estimated at between 8-10 billion US dollars.

 

However there were no details on how and when the system would work.

 

Nath fears any joint efforts now will be a case of too little, too late.

 

" Now they (governments) are waking up to the call but I think most of

the damage has been done, " Nath said.

 

" I feel it's too late... we feel that, in the future, there will not be

any large animals left. "

 

Animals and trees from Asia account for nine out of the top 10 species

in the world listed by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) as most likely to

become extinct. Among them are tiger and elephant species, the pig-nosed

turtle and the Indonesian yellow-crested cockatoo.

 

The president of the Animal Concerns Research and Education Society in

Singapore, Louis Ng, agreed on the need for tougher legislation.

 

" I think the real basic thing we need is animal welfare laws which

Singapore has... a lot of the delegates are hoping to ride on our

legislation, " Ng said.

 

" For example, Indonesia doesn't have animal laws. So if you kick a dog

there, or throw a cat down the building, you boil them, there is nothing

in the legal system that will prosecute you.

 

" Even in China there is no animal welfare law. "

 

Under Singapore's Endangered Species (Import and Export) Act, a first

offence for smuggling one endangered species carries a fine of up to

5,000 Singapore dollars (3,000 US), one year's jail, or both.

 

In areas where significant progress has been made in recent years,

activists point to the improving treatment of bears in China following

an intense lobbying campaign.

 

" There is a general closing down of bear farms, which is without doubt

the most cruel trade ever, " Ng said. " Animals Asia Foundation has

rescued more and more bears, so there is also a general trend to closing

down bear farms in Asia. "

 

Since 2000, Animals Asia Foundation has rescued almost 200 bears in China.

 

However, Animals Asia Foundation's Robinson said there were still 7,000

bears in China being farmed for their bile and gall bladders for their

perceived therapeutic benefits in traditional Chinese medicine.

 

In Vietnam, the government also announced this year it would phase out

bear farming.

 

" Vietnam said it is going to end bear farming altogether, " Ng said, " and

that is the Vietnamese government's own initiative. "

 

--

Dave Neale

UK Director

Animals Asia Foundation

 

ANIMALS ASIA HAS A BRAND NEW WEBSITE!

Find out more about our historic China Bear Rescue and Friends or Food? projects

by visiting the Animals Asia Foundation website at http://www.animalsasia.org

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