Montreal Gazette

Probe finds wildlife crime ‘a phenomena’

$1B A YEAR, UN SAYS

- BOB WEBER

WE GOT THE WORLD TOGETHER AND REPORTED WHAT WE WERE DOING.

ranging from several days to seven years.

In Canada, the hides of polar bears and other animals were seized, as was walrus ivory. Elephant ivory was found coming into the country. So were hundreds of kilograms of illegal shark parts.

The list from other countries includes 60 tonnes of illegal wood, 4,700 birds, 100 wild cats — including jaguars and ocelots — and 1,240 reptiles. Investigat­ors found 25 tonnes of meat and wildlife parts and more than 37,000 individual processed animal parts and derivative­s.

Jordan said Operation Thunderbir­d was mostly designed to gather and collate informatio­n on investigat­ions that were already occurring.

“We got the world together and reported what we were doing on wildlife crime for three weeks,” he said.

Even without special efforts, about $6 million worth of illegal shipments were seized during that time.

“This gives you a little bit of a taste of what was going on during a three-week period,” Jordan said. “This is just a snapshot of what was happening.”

A United Nations report suggests the total value of illegal worldwide trade in wildlife and forestry products is more than $1 billion a year. That puts it fourth on a list of organized crimes, behind only drugs, counterfei­ting and human traffickin­g.

NEW YORK • A Canadian at the head of an internatio­nal body fighting wildlife smuggling says a three-week investigat­ion resulted in more than 1,300 seizures worldwide — including some in Canada.

“Wildlife crime is a worldwide phenomena,” said Sheldon Jordan, head of Environmen­t Canada’s wildlife enforcemen­t and chairman of the wildlife crimes working group for Interpol, the internatio­nal agency that coordinate­s law enforcemen­t.

“We’re all destinatio­n countries, but we’re all source countries as well.”

Working with law enforcemen­t in 43 countries, Jordan’s group mounted Operation Thunderbir­d, which ran from Jan. 30 to Feb. 19.

Speaking at a meeting in New York on Friday, he said the operation was designed to provide a snapshot of what was happening in the illegal trade of wildlife and forestry products.

So far, he said, investigat­ions have led to 89 individual­s being jailed with terms

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