Thailand a hub for growing illegal ivory trade22/06/2009 11:15:41
TRAFFIC documented more than 26,000 worked ivory products for sale in Thailand: ivory Buddhas were popular items Click photo to enlarge © Daniel Stiles / TRAFFIC Southeast Asia. Thailand ivory trade - laws and loopholesThe internal trade in Thai and foreign wild elephants and their products is illegal according to the Wild Animal Reservation and Protection Act (WARPA) of 1992. Wild elephants are classified as protected animals. WARPA, along with the Wild Elephant Protection Act of 1921, prohibit the killing of wild elephants or their capture without official permission from the government. Domestic Thai elephants, however, are subject to the archaic Draught Animal Act of 1939, which continues to allow trade in domesticated elephants as well as the possession and/or sale of ivory derived from such animals. These loopholes are routinely exploited to prevent meaningful law enforcement actions from transpiring within Thailand. Elephant-size loopholes sustain Thai ivory tradeJune 2009. Legal loopholes and insufficient law enforcement mean that Thailand continues to harbour the largest illegal ivory market in Asia, says a new report from the wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC. The report also raises concerns that legal provisions governing trade in domesticated elephants are providing cover for illegal trade in wild-caught, highly-endangered Asian elephants from both Thailand and neighbouring Myanmar. 26,000 ivory items for sale Thailand in top 5 for illegal ivory trade "Thailand needs to reassess its policy for controlling its local ivory markets as currently it is not implementing international requirements to the ongoing detriment of both African and Asian Elephant populations," said Milliken. "Since 2004, the Thai government has only reported two ivory seizure cases totaling 1.2 tonnes of raw ivory." Thailand's capital, Bangkok, a major tourist destination, has emerged as the main hub for illegal ivory activities, accounting for over 70 percent of the retail outlets in Thailand offering ivory items for sale. TRAFFIC found 13 ivory workshops in Thailand, 8 of them in Uthai Thani; much of the ivory being processed was illegally imported from Africa Click photo to enlarge © Daniel Stiles / TRAFFIC Southeast Asia. European and US markets "The Thai Government needs to crack down on this serious illegal activity and stop allowing people to abuse the law," said Dr Colman O'Criodain, WWF International's analyst on wildlife trade issues. "A good first step would be to put in place a comprehensive registration system for all ivory in trade and for live elephants". Wild-caught Asian elephants Elephants imported from Myanmar The study also found that over a quarter of all live elephant exports from Thailand between 1980 and 2005 could have been illegal due to incomplete and inaccurate declarations made on the documentation required under CITES. "There must be greater scrutiny of the live elephant trade if enforcement efforts are to have any impact at all," said Chris R. Shepherd, TRAFFIC Southeast Asia's Acting Director. "Thailand and Myanmar should work together, and with urgency, to address cross-border trade problems," he added.
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