Bolivia struggles to halt animal
trade
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By Andrew Enever
in La Paz |
In mid-February this year Francesca Bernebei, an
animal rights campaigner working in Bolivia, discovered
a man trying to sell an ocelot in the capital, La
Paz.
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We can arrive on foot
and [the traders] will leave in helicopters
or light aircraft
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Colonel Dante Tarifa
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She alerted the
Forestry Police, an operational unit with responsibility
for applying environmental law.
Unit head, Colonel
Dante Tarifa, launched a covert operation. The man
was arrested and the oceleot, which is an endangered
species, was confiscated.
The animal trafficker
was questioned by Mario Baudoin, head of the government
department responsible for the protection of wildlife.
But after a brief discussion, Mr Baudoin decided
not to bring charges.
Laws 'meaningless'
Bolivia has been
a signatory to the Cites convention on international
trade of wild animals since 1975 - and since 1992
has outlawed the trading and ownership of wild animals
within the country.
But the reluctance
of the authorities to prosecute this case has highlighted
concerns that a lack of political interest is rendering
these laws meaningless.
However, Mr Baudoin
defended his decision: "If he was charged we would
have had to proceed with a trial which would have
been extremely time consuming and expensive and
we have almost no resources."
He also argued
that the blanket prohibition of having wild animals
as pets runs contrary to Bolivian social norms.
A
girl in El Alto market with her pet parrot
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"It's customary here
that everybody has a pet, but there is this law forbidding
it," he said. "If you try to apply this law I don't
know how many thousands of parrots and hundreds of
monkeys you would have to deal with."
Bolivia does
not have facilities to house confiscated animals.
Already the zoos are full of "pets" people could
not look after. But with so few controls of the
illegal trade, markets in La Paz and Santa Cruz
keep filling up with wild animals as quickly as
they are sold.
Dr Christian
Molina, a specialist in traumatised animals, was
the vet who examined the confiscated ocelot.
He found the
five-month-old cat in a terrible condition with
five fractures in its legs and pelvis, intestinal
and mouth infections, and malnutrition-associated
problems caused by separation from the mother.
Extinction
danger
He believes that
in the long term the lack of action to prevent small-time
traders could have serious consequences.
"Eventually all
the animals will be in danger of extinction because
throughout the country, everyone is hunting them
either to eat or to sell, and nobody does anything
to stop it," he said.
Colonel Tarifa believes that a major step in combating
small-scale animal traders would be an education campaign
co-ordinated by the Director of Biodiversity.
"It is very important to let these people know
which animals are in danger and should not be taken
from the wild. We have done this with trees, and
now people know that whoever smuggles wood will
lose everything."
But the problem is that such a campaign requires
resources and Col Tarifa is not optimistic.
Skin smuggling
"Nobody is interested in the trafficking of animals,"
he said. "The lack of legal and political support
leaves us paralysed."
And if work cannot be done at this relatively
simple level the chances of making any impact on
professional traders is non-existent.
Both Mr Baudoin and Colonel Tarifa spoke about
the large amounts of wild animals or skins that
are smuggled by organised criminal groups over Bolivia's
borders into Chile, Argentina and Paraguay.
But knowing about the activities of wild animal
traffickers is of little use if there are no resources
to combat them.
Colonel Tarifa added: "They kill many alligators
in remote areas but how are we supposed to get there?
"We can arrive on foot and [the traders] will
leave in helicopters or light aircraft, or by boat
down the rivers. We know they are doing this but
what can we do to stop it?"
But
knowing about the activities of wild animal
traffickers is of little use if there are no
resources to combat them. WWF has analysed the
illegal wildlife imports seized by HM Customs
and Excise - a total of over a million items
from 1996 to 2000, or more than 570 a day. The
accusation comes from WWF, the global environment
network, in a report entitled Traded towards
Extinction? Yet the fines imposed on smugglers
averaged nine pence (13 cents) per item. WWF
is concerned because it says many smugglers
are not intercepted. No sanction It says the
UK has some of the world's best-trained customs
officers, but too few to stop the wildlife trade.
And once smugglers get through customs they
can sell endangered species without fear of
arrest. WWF says the UK is also over-exploiting
species and destroying habitats through the
legal wildlife trade. It says 88% of parrots
imported were caught in the wild, not bred in
captivity. Globally, WWF says, wildlife traders
export 25-30,000 primates, from two to five
million wild birds, ten million reptile skins
and more than 500 m tropical fish annually.
