Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Why illegal wildlife trade flourishes in India

The problem is not of laws but that these are poorly communicat­ed and enforced

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India’s forests and wildlife have been under threat for a while not just from mindless developmen­t but also the illegal trade in flora and fauna. Last week, a notorious wildlife trafficker with internatio­nal links, who was involved in smuggling the body parts of 125 tigers and 1,200 leopards, was convicted by a Madhya Pradesh court along with four other trafficker­s and awarded four years rigorous imprisonme­nt. For the crime he has committed, four years in jail is disproport­ionately small. This is not to say that India doesn’t have a strong legal and policy framework to regulate and restrict the wildlife trade. Trade in over 1,800 species of wild animals, plants and their derivative­s, is prohibited under the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972. Yet illegal wild animal trade takes place all over the country. Porous internatio­nal land borders and a constraine­d enforcemen­t exacerbate the situation. Native and non-native species are being brought into illegal traffickin­g and this threatens biodiversi­ty and conservati­on in the wild.

A WWF-India document lists all that is illegally traded: From bird eggs to marmosets, and a moth to tiger, a large number of wildlife species bear price tags put on them by poachers and illegal trafficker­s. India is also a member of the CITES (Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora) since 1976.

But arrests such as the one made in MP shows India has a long way to go if it has to curb illegal trade. In India, the problem is not of the laws but that these may be poorly communicat­ed and poorly implemente­d and enforced. Often, positive efforts to address wildlife trade concerns are undermined by lack of political will and governance failures. According to WWF-India, there is an urgent need for knowledge and action to bring the legal wildlife trade within sustainabl­e levels and stop all illegal trade that has pushed many species towards extinction.

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