Kuwait Times

Nepal torches thousands of valuable wildlife parts

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Nepal destroyed thousands of valuable animal skins and other parts seized from poachers on a giant bonfire yesterday in a symbolic gesture against the illegal wildlife trade. More than 4,000 animal parts, including endangered tiger skins and rhino hides, were burned in a large pyre at Chitwan National Park, the nation’s most important conservati­on area.

“As a country committed to conservati­on of wildlife and biodiversi­ty, Nepal has destroyed animal parts stored over 20 years,” Maheswor Dhakal from the Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservati­on told AFP. “With this we want to send a message that these body parts of endangered animals are not meant for trade.” The stockpile included 67 tiger skins, more than 350 rhino hides, hair from elephant tails and other items.

The bonfire was timed to coincide with Internatio­nal Day for Biological Diversity yesterday. Another 1,100 kilograms of ivory is still in storage since it requires a higher temperatur­e to incinerate. Dhakal said the storage and security of the animal specimens was also a financial burden for the small and impoverish­ed country.

George Phocas, the regional attache for the US Fish and Wildlife Service, said the torching of the specimens was “very significan­t”. “It is both a way to prevent them from going to market... and it is also a statement that the government of Nepal and the people believe that it (the animal) should be in the wild,” Phocas said. “These are priceless but they don’t have a value if they are dead and in the closet.”

Nepal suffered rampant poaching during a decade-long civil war that ended in 2006. The government ordered officials guarding wildlife sanctuarie­s to abandon their posts to fight Maoist rebels. But conservati­on groups have praised the Himalayan nation for its progress since then in combating poachers, who mainly hunt tigers and rhinos in its national parks.

 ?? — AFP ?? KATHMANDU: Nepali army personnel burn wildlife parts seized from poachers at Chitwan National Park, some 250 km south yesterday.
— AFP KATHMANDU: Nepali army personnel burn wildlife parts seized from poachers at Chitwan National Park, some 250 km south yesterday.

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