The Phnom Penh Post

Prince William working to end tiger farms

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TWO tigers are killed or illegally trafficked every week, according to fresh analysis published yesterday that warned of the “disastrous impact” on the 4,000 big cats left in the wild.

The latest estimate comes as experts and dignitarie­s, including Britain’s Prince William, gather in Vietnam’s capital for an internatio­nal wildlife conference that kicks off today.

The two-day meeting brings together government­s, NGOs and activists to combat illegal wildlife trade and is being hosted in a country that has become a nexus for smuggling and consumptio­n.

Wildlife trade monitoring group TRAFFIC, which campaigns to protect endangered animals and help government­s catch those who trade in their parts, published a new analysis looking at 16 years of tiger seizure data from across the globe.

They estimate an average of 110 tigers became victims of the trade each year since 2000.

The study also illustrate­s the growing role that breeding centres are playing in fuelling the trade, especially in Southeast Asia.

Researcher­s singled out Thailand, Laos and Vietnam as among the world’s top countries for tiger farms.

“These countries have clearly made little meaningful progress in controllin­g this source of supply,” Kanitha Krishnasam­y, a co-author of TRAFFIC’s report said in a statement.

“Any further stimulatio­n of demand could have a more disastrous impact on wild tigers.”

Around 30 percent of tiger parts seized between 2012 and 2015 now come from captive tigers compared to just 2 percent between 2000 and 2003.

Animal rights groups argue that by keeping demand for tiger parts going, farms simultaneo­usly perpetuate the destructio­n of tigers in the wild.

Laos recently announced plans to close its tiger farms while Thailand has initiated investigat­ions after a long tussle with a controvers­ial Buddhist “tiger temple” that for years had been at the centre of allegation­s of complicity in the trade.

But both countries have a long his- tory of corruption and policing crackdowns that rarely result in permanent successes on the ground.

Animal rights groups hope the Hanoi conference will pile pressure on government­s to redouble efforts to stem the trade and close down farms.

“Ending tiger farming would ease the pressure and help law enforcemen­t agencies focus on the poachers and trafficker­s of wild tigers,” Michael Baltzer, from the World Wildlife Fund said.

Prince William, who has become a champion of endangered species in recent years, met Vietnam’s prime minister and vice president yesterday.

Part of his mission is to “engage with a wide cross section of Vietnamese society in order to encourage the work of local people to stamp out the use of things like rhino horn”, according to a statement.

He later headed to Lan Ong Street in Hanoi’s Old Quarter, a go-to strip for traditiona­l medicine ingredient­s, where he met a practition­er before speaking to a group of school children about wildlife conservati­on.”

 ?? POOL/KHAM/AFP ?? Britain’s Prince William (left) chats with Vietnamese residents at a cafe at the old quarters of Hanoi yesterday. Britain’s Prince William is in Vietnam to attend an internatio­nal conference on wildlife traffickin­g.
POOL/KHAM/AFP Britain’s Prince William (left) chats with Vietnamese residents at a cafe at the old quarters of Hanoi yesterday. Britain’s Prince William is in Vietnam to attend an internatio­nal conference on wildlife traffickin­g.

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