Tiger poaching 'still at danger level'

By environment correspondent Alex Kirby

Poachers are continuing to kill the world's remaining
tigers, despite progress in reducing the use of the
animals' bones in traditional medicine. 

A report by the Traffic network, the wildlife trade
monitoring programme of the World Wide Fund for
Nature (WWF) and the World Conservation Union
(IUCN), says the poaching is continuing "unabated". 

A recent WWF survey in Indonesia found that at least
66 Sumatran tigers had been killed in the last two
years alone. 

This represents almost 20% of the wild Sumatran tiger
population. Of the total lost, 37 animals were killed in
national parks. 

WWF says the discovery in the Indonesian capital,
Jakarta, of a pet shop with two tiger cubs on open sale
in 1998 "demonstrates how blatant the tiger trade has
become in some countries". 

Progress undermined 

The report says there has been progress in reducing
the use of tiger bones in Chinese medicines, because
of tougher laws and enforcement, and because
substitutes are increasingly accepted. 

But it says the progress is
being undermined by the
trade in tiger skins, teeth
and claws, with major tiger
markets flourishing openly
in most countries where
the animals live. 

The report, Far from a
Cure, says: "Disturbingly
large markets for tiger
skins persist, and other
large cats, such as
leopards, are poached as substitutes for tiger bone." 

In the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, it says, a raid last
December resulted in one of the largest seizures of
recent times, including the skins of four tigers and 70
leopards, and 18,000 leopard claws. 

In the spotlight 

The Traffic researchers say all range states (countries
with wild tigers) and countries which use parts of the
animal should get tougher on tiger crime, introducing
and enforcing stronger laws to deter poaching and
illegal trade. 

They say there were markets in Indonesia, Cambodia,
Vietnam, Burma and Laos during the last few months
of 1999. 

WWF is demanding immediate action from these
states, which it says will be in the spotlight at the
CITES (UN Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species) meeting in Kenya in April. 

Stuart Chapman of
WWF-UK said: "The tiger
is running out of time, and
governments are running
out of excuses. This
barbaric trade must end." 

He told BBC News Online:
"We think it is realistic to
demand action from range
states, even though they
are poor countries. 

"They do have the capacity to stop the open sale of
tiger parts. It's simply a question of a police officer
walking the street and preventing the sale of skins, or
cubs. 

Applying pressure 

"It's not rhetoric. We've seen examples in the past
where action under CITES has produced results. 

"Indonesia has a huge wildlife trade in things like
reptile skins, coral and songbirds. 

"If countries like that feel the pinch in other areas, a
low-level issue like tigers will come right up the
agenda." 

The number of wild tigers, thought perhaps to have
been as high as 100,000 a century ago, is now put at
around 6,000. 

**************************************************************
Danial Irfachsyad
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Department of Chemistry
University of Southampton
************************************************************** 

---------------------------------------------------------------------
Mulai langganan: kirim e-mail ke [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Stop langganan: kirim e-mail ke [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Archive ada di http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]

Kirim email ke