Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

(CN) China legalising tiger trade?

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

September 3, 2009

 

Fears for Indian tiger after Chinese green light for sale of animal products

 

 

Jane Macartney in Beijing and Rhys Blakely in Mumbai

 

The world's dwindling population of tigers could be pushed closer to

extinction after China quietly approved the sale of products extracted from the

endangered animals.

 

Environmentalists warned yesterday that the move could boost trade in

illegal potions and create a market for poachers preying on the rare animals as

far away as India.

 

Tiger tonics, such as wine made from ground bones, are regarded as potent

traditional Chinese medicines and fetch a high price on the black market.

 

The Chinese State Forestry Administration, which is responsible for

wildlife, issued a document allowing trade in legally obtained tiger and leopard

skins in December 2007, but with such little fanfare that it barely rated a

mention in the domestic media.

 

Almost every reference was subsequently erased from the internet, apparently

amid official concerns of damage to China's reputation before the 2008 Olympics

in Beijing.

 

The alarm was sounded yesterday by Traffic, a wildlife trade monitoring network

linked to the WWF. A Traffic official said that the wording of the document was

loose enough to allow its possible interpretation by the vast tiger farms in

China as a go-ahead to make tiger bone wine.

 

The document specifies the trade and use of tiger and leopard skins 'and their

products'. Such pelts are traditionally prized among Tibetans to embellish robes

for ceremonial occasions. But it is the three vague words that have sparked

anxiety.

 

Xu Hongfa, of Traffic, said: 'I think these words could be used as a cover by

tiger farmers to make tiger bone wine and they would try to argue that it

doesn't just refer to skins.'

 

Only about 30 to 40 tigers survive in the wild in China. But about 5,000 live in

tiger farms, where they are bred at great speed. Ostensibly the farms are

tourist attractions but it is widely believed that their owners hope to use the

animals to produce expensive tiger tonics. The income from visitors to the farms

would be dwarfed by the profits from sales of tiger bone wine.

 

India boasts the world's largest population of tigers in the wild. Indian

conservationists believe that the rapid decline in tiger numbers in the

country is a direct result of China's economic rise and the related increase

in demand for traditional medicines. The Indian tiger population stood at

1,411 in February last year, according to an official count, down from 3,642

in 2002 and an estimated 40,000 a century ago.

 

Ashok Kumar, of the Wildlife Trust of India, a conservation organisation,

said that any relaxation of Chinese rules would have a catastrophic effect

on the Indian tiger population.

 

'In all our communications with the Chinese we have been led to believe that

the ban is firmly in place,' he said. 'We were not aware of this document,

[which] could have a huge effect on wild tigers in India by stimulating

demand for medicines in China.'

 

It is also feared that the release of legal farmed tiger products would

create a niche market for wild tiger products sourced from India, which

would be likely to be regarded as more potent by Chinese consumers and so

command a premium.

 

Conservationists also believe that Indian tigers will be targeted because

poaching the animals is much cheaper than farming them. 'You can kill a

tiger with a few rupees' worth of pesticide,' Mr Kumar said. 'Raising one in

captivity is a costly exercise.'

 

Poachers in India are paid as little as 400 rupees ($5) for a tiger by

traffickers who transport the carcasses to China, usually through Nepal.

 

Tigers have been used for medicinal purposes in China for thousands of years

and a single animal can be worth a fortune. The bones are the most valuable

part, with the 25kg (55lb) from an average animal worth about 2.4 million

yuan ($215,000), many times the price of a skin.

 

The Indian Government said last week that it was sending a delegation to China

to discuss the plight of the sub-continent's tigers.

 

Indian officials say that Chinese co-operation is essential if tigers are

not to be consigned to history books and zoos. They cite other trades in

illicit products, such as drugs, where vast amounts of state funding around

the world have made little impact.

 

'Unless the user co-operates, it will be impossible to stop the trade in

tigers,' Mr Kumar said.

 

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article6819403.ece

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...