Bangkok Post

Advocate for animals

Acclaimed Vietnamese wildlife defender Trang Nguyen fights poachers and prejudice.

- By AFP Reporters

● As a small girl, Trang Nguyen saw a bear stabbed through the chest with a giant needle at her neighbour’s house in northern Vietnam.

The bear, flat on its back, was being pumped for its bile, a fluid drawn from its gallbladde­r that has long been used in traditiona­l medicine to treat liver disease.

“I had seen visitors to Hanoi zoo who brought sticks to poke animals and it really made my blood boil,” Trang, the founder of local conservati­on group WildAct, told AFP.

“But conservati­on wasn’t something I really wanted to do until I witnessed what happened to this bear.”

It was the first of her many encounters with a global multi-billion-dollar illegal wildlife trade that devastates species the world over, fuels corruption and threatens human health.

The 31-year-old — named by the BBC in 2019 as one of the world’s most inspiring and influentia­l women — has spent much of her time since then trying to end the scourge.

She has gone undercover in South Africa to snare trafficker­s and secured a PhD with a dissertati­on on the impact of traditiona­l medicines on wildlife.

Trang has also set up her home country’s first postgradua­te course for aspiring conservati­onists, to help more Vietnamese make it to the top of her field.

In the 1990s, decades of war and isolation meant environmen­tal awareness was a new notion in Vietnam.

Trang recalls her parents telling her: “Only rich people from western countries do that kind of work”.

Now there are more local conservati­onists, wildlife protection laws have been enacted, if patchily enforced, and the number of bears kept in captivity for bile farming has dropped by 90% in the last 15 years, according to Education for Nature Vietnam.

But as the country grew richer, demand for exotic wildlife dishes soared and animal parts sought for their perceived health benefits — such as rhino horn and pangolin scales — became a status symbol for some within the fast-growing middle classes.

Today the country is a key producer, consumer and transit point for trafficked wildlife, says WildAct.

Through courses at Vinh University in central Vietnam and community programmes in wildlife trade hotspots, Trang is trying to empower Vietnamese people to resolve these problems themselves.

In turn, she hopes they will become a louder voice in the global conversati­on about illegal wildlife trade, and help shape policy.

The responses of some global wildlife organisati­ons to the coronaviru­s pandemic, widely thought to have begun at a market known to sell wild animals in the Chinese city of Wuhan, were hugely unhelpful for campaigner­s in Asia and Africa, says Trang.

One called for a complete ban on wet markets, even though the term is used in Asia and Africa to describe any market where fresh produce is sold, while another termed them “unhygenic”.

“When things like that are said it’s very difficult for conservati­onists to ask people to participat­e in our work,” she explains, as they are seen as “prejudiced”.

Trang also wants more women in conservati­on — a field still dominated by men — and has written a book to inspire young girls.

Loosely based on her personal story, Saving Sorya tells the tale of a Vietnamese conservati­onist who must prepare a rescued baby sun bear for life in the wild.

Already published in Vietnamese, and due out in English this year, the children’s book has a female protagonis­t — something she insisted on despite being told “no-one was going to read it” if she did.

Trang’s own story is one of remarkable determinat­ion.

From the age of eight, she pestered wildlife groups with requests to intern and learned English by watching the

The responses of some global wildlife organisati­ons to the coronaviru­s pandemic have been hugely unhelpful for campaigner­s in Asia and Africa, says Trang

BBC documentar­y Planet Earth late at night. She won scholarshi­ps to study in Britain, including for a masters degree in conservati­on leadership at Cambridge University, and founded WildAct in her mid-20s.

Wildlife trafficker­s are in prison because of her.

“It was very easy for me to pose as a buyer of wildlife products,” she remembers of her time working undercover in South Africa.

Around three rhinos are poached there every day, largely for the Vietnamese and Chinese consumer markets, according to the wildlife trade monitoring network Traffic.

But it was there that she learned that the trade is not “black and white”.

“One guy I was helping get arrested, he wasn’t high up the chain: he was a poor person who got exploited … (and was asked to) to go kill the animal and be the transport.”

After the arrest, “I was actually feeling really sad,” she said.

“I thought: Now no-one is providing for his kids, they are probably going to become poachers like him and soon it will be their turn to be imprisoned.”

She’ll keep fighting for change, she says, but admits it takes a long time to shift people’s behaviour.

“For some species, things might not move quickly enough to save them.”

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 ??  ?? Trang Nguyen, founder of the Vietnamese conservati­on group WildAct, was named by the BBC in 2019 as one of the world’s most inspiring and influentia­l women.
Trang Nguyen, founder of the Vietnamese conservati­on group WildAct, was named by the BBC in 2019 as one of the world’s most inspiring and influentia­l women.
 ??  ?? Trang Nguyen poses with her book near Hoan Kiem Lake in Hanoi.
Trang Nguyen poses with her book near Hoan Kiem Lake in Hanoi.

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