By Neo Chai Chin, TODAY | Posted: 30 July 2012 0703 hrs
SINGAPORE: Bears in
metal jackets - with metal catheters draining bile from their gall
bladders - stand in tiny cages with their muscles largely wasted.
Some
have had their teeth smashed, or claws cut. Others could be killed,
with their paws cut off or gall bladders taken out on-the-spot - if that
is what the buyer wants.
Animal welfare issues aside, these bear
farms - found in countries such as Laos, Myanmar and China and where
thousands of bears are kept - are also a "real concern" from a
conservation standpoint, given evidence that suggests that some of these
bears are caught in the wild, said wildlife monitoring network
Traffic's South-east Asia Deputy Director Chris Shepherd, who was
recently in town.
The two bear species in South-east Asia - the Asian black bear and sun bear - are endangered species.
Cross-border
trade of bear bile products is prohibited under the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora
(CITES), but occurs throughout the region, noted a bear bile trade
report published last year that Dr Shepherd co-authored.
The
bleak picture extends to wildlife trafficking in general: With growing
demand fuelled by rising affluence and the rise of online trade, and
enforcement agencies failing to keep up with smugglers, trafficking
levels are at an all-time high, according to Dr Shepherd, who is based
in Malaysia.
"The situation has never been as severe as it is now," he told MediaCorp.
"Last
year, more rhinos were killed in South Africa to supply demand in
Vietnam than have ever been killed before - it was the absolute peak
last year. This year, it's looking to be worse."
Last year, 448
rhinos were killed in South Africa. Conservationists have pointed to
demand from Asia, in particular Vietnam. According to Traffic,
Vietnamese made up 24 of the 43 arrests of Asian nationals for rhino
crimes in South Africa this year, reported The Guardian last Monday.
Dr
Shepherd said the aim is not to stop all wildlife trade - but to
"enforce legislation to a point where wildlife is not threatened by
trade and, in some cases, can be used sustainably". Such laws enacted
for the white-tailed deer in North America have resulted in no
detrimental effect on its wild population despite hunting, for instance.
Traffic
investigates trade, provides intelligence reports and assists
authorities in wildlife trafficking enforcement. It has developed
materials such as species identification guides in various languages for
the ASEAN Wildlife Enforcement Network, an inter-governmental
initiative targeting wildlife crime.
Its most recent report, on
trade of birds in the Solomon Islands, analysed 11 years of trade
figures and named Singapore as a key laundering point for tens of
thousands of birds caught in the wild but declared as captive bred.
Dr
Shepherd urged the Singapore authorities to "better scrutinise permits
on shipments" of various species. "If they closed the door here, it
would have a knock-on effect globally. Singapore definitely has the
potential and capacity to do that," he said.
Cases of illegal
import, export and trans-shipment of wildlife and their parts or
products have decreased in the last two years, according to figures from
the Agri-food and Veterinary Authority (AVA).
There were 33 cases in 2010 and 20 cases last year, with eight cases so far this year.
The
possession and sale of illegal wildlife and their parts or products has
decreased from 64 in 2010 to 14 last year. But in the first half of
this year, 16 cases have already been recorded.
Three cases since
2010 have been prosecuted in court, with the rest given warnings or
composition fines, said an AVA spokesperson.
He added that the
AVA conducts regular inspections on shops that sell wildlife, and checks
all shipments from high-risk countries at ports of entry and exit.
It
also investigates CITES infringements based on its own intelligence and
other information sources. The public may also contact the AVA at 6227
0670 to provide information on illegal wildlife sales.
"Singapore
consumers can play their part by not eating exotic or illegal meat in
restaurants overseas, and not buying medicines and souvenirs with
wildlife parts," said Dr Shepherd.
"They should not keep wildlife
as pets and, if they come across wildlife being illegally sold by
dealers, they should resist "rescuing" the animals by buying them."
So sad.
boycott!!
notice now no stray dogs, - all eaten by ah tiongs. sometimes stillgot stray dogs, left over after construction site ccompleted. i got one bird - keepsafe in my pants so will never fly away or get stolen.
Originally posted by troublemaker2005:notice now no stray dogs, - all eaten by ah tiongs. sometimes stillgot stray dogs, left over after construction site ccompleted. i got one bird - keepsafe in my pants so will never fly away or get stolen.