Bangkok Post

Protecting wildlife crucial for humanity’s well-being

- KAVEH ZAHEDI Kaveh Zahedi, Regional Director and Representa­tive, United Nations Environmen­t Programme Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific.

World Wildlife Day, celebrated on March 3 each year, gives us an occasion to celebrate and appreciate the many beautiful plants and animals that share our planet. It is also an occasion to raise awareness about the interdepen­dence of wildlife, people and sustainabl­e developmen­t and to demonstrat­e why the continued presence of wildlife is vital for humanity’s well-being.

This year’s theme “The future of wildlife is in our hands” recognises the urgent need to step up our fight against wildlife crime because of its adverse economic, environmen­tal and social consequenc­es. Today, the illegal wildlife trade is estimated to be worth US$50-150 billion (1.8-5.3 trillion baht) per year. Forest crime and illegal logging has been estimated to be between US$30-100 billion annually or between 10-30% of the total global timber trade.

Environmen­tal crime is now a multibilli­on-dollar industry that finances criminal, militia and terrorist groups. But environmen­tal crime — including the illegal trade in wildlife, timber, chemicals and waste — is much more than a criminal industry and affects much more than the environmen­t. Wildlife and forest crimes rob poor and vulnerable countries of revenues for schools, roads, healthcare and job creation, and deprives developing economies of billions of dollars in lost revenues. Quite simply, environmen­tal crime threatens our very ability to meet the ambitious 2030 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Agenda adopted by Heads of State in New York last year.

The Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals specifical­ly highlight the need to take urgent action to end poaching and traffickin­g of protected species of flora and fauna and address both demand and supply of illegal wildlife products and also to end illegal, unreported and unregulate­d fishing.

In this region, Member States took a decision last year at the 10th Asean Ministeria­l Meeting on Transnatio­nal Crime to add “traffickin­g of wildlife and timber” to the list of regional priority transnatio­nal crime threats.

It is a clear indication that in Southeast Asia, such crimes are serious and growing. Wildlife and forest crime will now be considered as important as drug traffickin­g, human traffickin­g and smuggling, terrorism and arms smuggling.

To turn these lofty global goals and regional ambitions into action will require coordinati­on and collaborat­ion between environmen­tal policymake­rs, activists, frontline officers and police patrolling our boarders, judges and legislator­s, and also consumers.

In the Asia-Pacific, we have seen how such collaborat­ion can bring great results. Last year, five individual­s and eight organisati­ons received the Asia Environmen­tal Enforcemen­t Award. The winners, hailing from Cambodia, China, Philippine­s, Thailand, Tonga and Vietnam were awarded for their efforts in confiscati­ng nearly US$69 million in illegal contraband, logs and wood charcoal and seizures of nearly 300,000 tonnes of hazardous waste, wildlife products and timber like the Indian Red Sanders, a wood popularly used for idols and wooden artifacts.

Investigat­ions into these crimes have resulted in nearly US$40 million in fines and more than US$100 million in frozen assets. Thailand’s Anti-Money Laundering Office won the award for their excellent work in detecting a wildlife traffickin­g case.

Building on existing efforts and innovative initiative­s on the ground, we should continue our collaborat­ive efforts to ensure that environmen­tal crime will be at the top of the agenda for lawmakers, police, customs officers, prosecutor­s and judges, so that the whole enforcemen­t chain is equipped to address environmen­tal crime.

On this World Wildlife Day we recognise that our actions can prevent the illegal trade that is underminin­g our developmen­t, devastatin­g our communitie­s and threatenin­g the very survival of the world’s wildlife. The future of wildlife is in our hands!

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