CLOSING WILDLIFE TRADE CORRIDORS ON EUROPE’S EASTERN BORDERS


Environmental Panorama
International
December of 2006

14 Dec 2006 - Budapest, Hungary – Threatened species will be at risk from a rise in illegal wildlife trade entering Europe once Bulgaria and Romania join the European Union, according to TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade monitoring network.

A report released today by TRAFFIC — Wildlife Trade in Central and Eastern Europe: A review of CITES implementation in 15 countries — acknowledges the efforts made by the ten countries which acceded in May 2004 and the six countries, including Bulgaria and Romania, that will join the EU in the near future. However, the report expresses concern over gaps in the legal systems that hinder the implementation of the EU´s regulations for controlling trade in protected animals and plants.

“Inadequate laws, a lack of trained enforcement officers and insufficiently equipped authorities are the main reasons for these loopholes in the EU’s eastern borders,” said Katalin Kecse-Nagy, a programme officer at TRAFFIC Europe and co-author of the report.

“Enforcement officers responsible for wildlife trade controls in a number of the countries under review have not been sufficiently trained and often are unaware of techniques and methods used by smugglers to import wild animals or plants into the EU market illegally.”

Central and Eastern Europe is home to a wide range of species that are rare or extinct in Western Europe, including the brown bear, wolf, saker falcon, sturgeons, and such plants such as cyclamen and snowdrops.

The region has also traditionally played an important “transit” role for wildlife and wildlife products imported into the EU from around the world. The region is an important re-exporter of wildlife, such as live reptiles. Between 1996 and 2003, the 16 countries reviewed re-exported more CITES-listed live reptiles than the rest of the EU. In addition, a number of these countries were also important exporters and re-exporters of caviar, including Poland, Turkey, Bulgaria and Romania.

The control of illegal wildlife trade in the EU is particularly challenging as systematic controls only take place at the external borders. Once CITES-listed animal and plant species enter the EU they can be moved relatively freely. Between 2000 and 2004, countries such as Bulgaria and Romania reported no or only a very few seizures of wildlife products, while others reported relatively high numbers of illegal trade coming through these countries. Species most commonly seized by other countries were threatened tortoises, exotic live birds and caviar.

‘The few cases of illegal wildlife trade detected in the acceding states indicate enforcement gaps in what is soon to be the frontline of the EU’s external borders,” said Kecse-Nagy.

“Controls of wildlife trade into the EU are only as strong as its weakest border points, and these are quickly exploited by smugglers. The EU must ensure that all 27 EU Member States have the relevant capacity and expertise to tackle illegal wildlife trade.”

The report also noted the lack of consultation and coordination between the different agencies involved in controlling wildlife trade in many of the countries reviewed.

“Existing EU Member States should assist the new countries in capacity-building and training initiatives to enhance their expertise and knowledge on the relevant EU wildlife trade regulations,” Kecse-Nagy added.

“This will also strengthen the coordination and information exchange at the EU level and will ensure that illegal trade in the EU is addressed holistically. Such coordination is urgently needed to tackle illegal wildlife trade in an increasingly expanding EU market.”

TRAFFIC — a joint programme of WWF and IUCN – The World Conservation Union — is urging Bulgaria and Romania, which are set to join the EU on 1 January 2007, to increase their efforts to stem the illegal trade in wildlife, and is urging current EU Member States to ensure that the issue is addressed strategically at the national and EU-wide level.

END NOTES:

• The TRAFFIC report — Wildlife Trade in Central and Eastern Europe: A review of CITES implementation in 15 countries — focuses on the ten new EU Member States (Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia), and six countries neighbouring the EU that are also preparing for EU accession (Bulgaria, Croatia, Montenegro, Rumania, Serbia and Turkey). In particular, it provides an overview of the status of the implementation and enforcement of EU Wildlife Trade Regulations and CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora). The report was made possible with financial contributions from the Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, Environment and Water Management of Austria, WWF-Austria, WWF-Germany and WWF-Italy.

• CITES regulates international trade in some 30,000 species of animals and plants through a system of certificates and permits. The EU jointly implements CITES through common regulations (Council Regulation (EC) No. 338/97 and Commission Regulation (EC) 865/2006) that are in some way stricter than CITES.Katalin Kecse-Nagy, Programme Officer

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
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