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Endangered animals are the new blood diamonds as militias and warlords use poaching to fund death.
The marauders galloped into Zakouma National Park in Chad, the last refuge of
that country's once thriving elephant population. Rather than bother with the
few remaining elephants, the attackers last May were after the 1.5 tons of
ivory—worth as much as $1.3 million—that Chadian officials had seized from
poachers over the years and stored in a strongroom at park headquarters. Neither
the audacity of the attack nor its brutality—the raiders killed three park
rangers—shocked wildlife
officials: some 100 rangers, outgunned and outmanned, are killed every year
defending Africa's
wildlife. Rather, the shock was the identity of the attackers.
In an ominous sign of how the killing of endangered animals has evolved from
a crime committed by small bands of unorganized, mostly poor operators, these
attackers were Janjaweed,
the militia that has carried out genocidal attacks in Darfur. Lured by
easy money, the Janjaweed have expanded their killing fields to endangered
species. In the past two years, they have butchered hundreds of elephants around
Zakouma, say Chadian authorities, carrying the tusks back to Sudan, where they
are secreted on ships bound mostly for Asia—or traded for
weapons.
For the Janjaweed, killing elephants is the least of its atrocities. But the
militia's move into ivory poaching signals a terrifying turn in the world's
efforts to save vanishing species. The battle is no longer just about the
elephant's trumpet never again echoing over the African savanna, or the Bengal
tiger's roar being heard only in memory. The threat posed by the contraband
wildlife trade is now also about the money it generates—wave upon wave of
it—that is being used by very bad people to do very bad things. "Earnings from
the ivory trade is sustaining the Janjaweed," says Michael
Wamithi, former head of the Kenya Wildlife Service and now director of the
elephant program for the International
Fund for Animal Welfare. "It's untraceable money," much like the "blood
diamonds" that bankrolled brutal wars in Sierra Leone. On March 5, the House
Committee on Natural Resources will hold a hearing on the new twist in illegal
wildlife trade.
Three nights after the Janjaweed killed the Chadian rangers in their assault
on the ivory (the surviving rangers drove them off before they got their hands
on the stockpile), heavily armed Somali poachers marched in lockstep so
precisely that a dozen men made the sound of a single footfall. Reaching the
bank of Kenya's Tana River, they fired 300 rounds from their assault rifles and
killed three Kenyan rangers before losing four of their own and fleeing. The
poachers, says IFAW's Wamithi, were traced to a Somali warlord, one of many
whose private armies have destabilized that nation for decades. The link didn't
surprise experts. If you have to equip, feed and pay a few thousand soldiers,
asks William
Clark, who chairs Interpol's
Working Group on Wildlife Crime, "where does that come from? You need money to
pay for civil war."
The State
Department estimates that the market value of illegal ivory (the most
commonly trafficked contraband, at $400 a pound), tiger parts ($7,000 for a set
of bones), rhino horn (up to $25,000 per pound of bone), shark fins, exotic
birds (up to $90,000 for a Lear's macaw), reptile skin, bushmeat and other
illegal wildlife products has reached $10 billion a year and possibly twice
that. China is the largest market, with the United States a close second.
The tip-off that contraband wildlife is being moved by organized syndicates
is in the pattern of the seizures. Authorities intercepted an average of 92
illegal shipments of ivory every month in 2006, found Tom Milliken, director of
the Africa program for Traffic International, a global network formed in 1976 to
monitor wildlife trade. That is not much changed since the 1990s, but one thing
is: the number that weighed one ton or more doubled from 1997 to 2006. That
rise, says Traffic's Richard Thomas, "is certainly evidence of increasing
organized criminal gangs … Moving a ton of ivory is not a trivial undertaking."
Recently seized shipments of coral, snakeskins, conch shells, ivory, shahtoosh
(the hair of endangered antelopes) and abalone have all been the largest-ever of
their types, says Interpol's Clark, another sign that this is not the work of
small-time crooks.
It is not size alone that points to the involvement of large syndicates, but
the sophistication of the smuggling. In a 2006 seizure in Hong Kong, a
ship that had sailed from Cameroon was
found to have three containers with false compartments, each filled with ivory.
The compartments had been deftly made and camouflaged with sophisticated
metallurgy. The suspected trafficker, a Taiwanese man, has not been extradited
because of Taiwan's diplomatic isolation; prosecution is unlikely. But an
investigation by Hong Kong authorities revealed that he had shipped at least 15
containers along the same route with the same declared contents—timber planks—in
the past few years. All 15 got through with what Interpol suspects was 40 tons
of contraband ivory.
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