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http://www.nepalitimes.com.np/issue/2009/07/3/Nation/16088

 

*Feather fiends

**Nepal is emerging as a hub for the trafficking of endangered birds*

 

DEWAN RAI

FROM ISSUE #458 (03 JULY 2009 - 09 JULY 2009) |

 

AMRIT GAUTAM

With over 864 species, Nepal has the world's richest diversity of birdlife

on the planet. Traffickers, who were already using Kathmandu airport's lax

and corrupt customs for smuggling out contraband, are now turning to birds.

 

Charismatic mammals like rhinos, tigers and leopards grab all the headlines,

but bird smuggling through Nepal is a growing problem, says Diwakar

Chapagain, wildlife trade expert at the Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF).

" Owls and parakeets are just not exciting enough, " he says.

 

Ram Bahadur Gurung, a retired policeman was arrested with a eurasian eagle

owl (huchil in Nepali) from Shankhamul in May. He claimed that he found the

bird on a tree near Chobar, but it was actually trapped and reared at home

for sale in the international market.

 

The Kaski District Forest Office raided and rescued five owls from three

villages of the district in June with the help of the green group, Roots and

Shoot Nepal. Villagers said they didn't know capturing the birds was

illegal, and said they were planning to rear them as pets.

 

But Manoj Gautam of Roots and Shoots, who went undercover as a trader,

suspects that's not the real story. " We offered to buy the owls and pay more

than the other traders, and they quoted Rs 400,000, " says Gautam.

PICS: MANOJ GAUTAM

 

Among all the birds trapped in the wild for sale, owls seem to be gaining

popularity. Of the 38 owls which had been trapped in Kaski's villages, 31

had been sold already.

 

The supply of owls is being driven by a surging international demand for the

nocturnal birds, which are prized in Europe and sultans' palaces in the Gulf

as pets. There is also a growing demand in India, where owls are used in

tantrik rituals to exorcise evil spirits and the bones of dead owls are

believed to have medicinal properties. There are reports of night-vision

experiments conducted on owls.

 

The depletion of owl populations can have a devastating impact on the

local ecology because owls control the populations of pests like mice and

rats.

 

Villagers can sell an adult huchil to local middlemen for up to Rs 400,000.

The bird can can fetch up to 10 times more by the time it is sold to a buyer

in the Middle East. Chicks, which are easy to capture, cost anywhere between

Rs 5,000-Rs 20,000.

 

" Owls are easy to catch, and they fetch such a high price, that is the

reason for the supply, " says Raju Acharya of Friends of Nature who has just

co-authored a report on the owl trade. Owls are being severely depleted in

20 districts, with Kanchanpur, Mustang and Kaski the worst affected.

 

The Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation seems to be in

denial. Spokesperson Laxmi Manandhar told us: " I don't think smuggling of

birds is possible. Even those who want to keep birds are required to obtain

permission from the government. "

 

There is evidence that Nepal is also becoming a trans-shipment point for

wildlife smuggling in the region. A cargo of 254 exotic birds coming from

Pakistan was found atthe Kathmandu airport in April 2007. The consignment

contained cockatiels, African grey parrots, macaws worth $1 million in the

international market.

 

Customs officials assured conservationists that the birds would be sent back

to where they came from, but were reportedly all destroyed that night. Now,

activists suspect officials sent them on to their destination in East Asia

after receiving hefty payoffs.

 

Gautam and other conservations say the airport is just the tip of the

iceberg, the real smuggling routes are on the road links across the northern

and southern borders.

 

 

--

Lucia de Vries

Freelance Journalist

Bagdol, Patan, Nepal

Wijk 4-47, 8321 GE Urk, Holland

 

 

 

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