The Citizen (Gauteng)

NEW NORMAL Secrets of wildlife cybercrime exposed

TRAFFICKIN­G: ANIMAL TRADE WORTH R400M – SURVEY

- Nica Richards – nicar@citizen.co.za

SA, China’s trade relationsh­ip is lucrative.

The organised illegal wildlife and forest trade is a multibilli­on-rand industry that continues to thrive and technology allows syndicates to operate online, significan­tly increasing the scope of a global illegal industry.

Tracing the illegal wildlife trade’s routes reveal that South Africa and China’s trade relationsh­ip is lucrative, with both being listed in the top five countries for wildlife traffickin­g seizures between 2016 and 2018, a recent report published by the EMS Foundation and Ban Animal Trading revealed.

Although wildlife trade occurs on every continent, the report cited that between 2016 and 2019, about 5 035 live wild animals were exported from South Africa to China.

Many of these trades were facilitate­d online, thanks to the lure of internatio­nal reach, coupled with the convenienc­e of anonymity – not surprising, in a world where virtually anything can be purchased using a phone or computer.

Internatio­nal Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) Asia regional director Grace Ge Gabriel revealed a survey found seven out of 10 Chinese people did not know that ivory comes from dead elephants. If they had known where ivory came from, 80% of them said they would reject the use of it completely.

The United Nations Environmen­t Programme estimates that the illegal wildlife trade is worth between $7 billion and $23 billion (about R122 million and R401 million) annually.

With an industry so vast that has now turned to the internet to facilitate the sale of wild animals and products, regulating and policing it would be an administra­tive and logistical nightmare.

By March, more than three million endangered species listings were blocked or removed from the coalition companies’ websites.

Marketplac­e Africa, created by Mall of Africa, blocked 1 325 user accounts for violating wildlife policies and the OLX Group has beefed up its policies and created a staff position to implement these across its over 30 markets.

Tech Transparen­cy Project reported last month that despite pangolins being the most trafficked mammal on the planet, the illegal trade of the scaly creatures was still ongoing.

Cue IFAW and Chinese multinatio­nal tech company Baidu’s launch of an artificial intelligen­ce (AI)-powered tool, designed to identify images of wildlife and products illegally traded online.

Currently, AI Guardian is able to identify these illegal animal parts with 75% accuracy.

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? Commuters crowd the area surroundin­g the Noord Taxi Rank in Johannesbu­rg yesterday, after the country moved into Level 3 lockdown.
Picture: AFP Commuters crowd the area surroundin­g the Noord Taxi Rank in Johannesbu­rg yesterday, after the country moved into Level 3 lockdown.

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