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JOINT PRESS RELEASE
Powerful alliance to fight wildlife
crime comes into effect
Saint Petersburg/Geneva/Lyon/Vienna/Washington
D.C./Brussels, 23 November 2010 - While the majority of the discussions
at the International Tiger Forum in Saint Petersburg this week
are understandably on tiger’s habitats and ecosystems, the
heads of five major international agencies have met to seal a
powerful alliance to fight wildlife crime effectively and discuss
collective actions to stop the key drivers that are bringing the
largest of the wild cats to the brink of extinction: poaching,
smuggling and illegal trade.
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Secretary-General John Scanlon with Yury Fedotov, Executive-Director of UNODC and Robert Zoellick, President of the World Bank, International Tiger Forum, Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation
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| Secretary-General John Scanlon with Ronald Noble, Secretary-General of Interpol, Interpol Headquarters, Lyon, France |
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| John Sellar, Chief, Enforcement Support, CITES Secretariat and Mr Kunio Mikuriya, Secretary-General of WCO. WCO Headquarters, Brussels,
Belgium |
The Secretary-General of the Convention on International Trade
in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), the Secretary-General
of ICPO-INTERPOL, the Executive Director of the United Nations
Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), the President of the World
Bank and the Secretary-General of the World Customs Organization
(WCO) have signed a Letter of Understanding that brings into effect
today the International Consortium on Combating Wildlife Crime
(ICCWC).
Commenting on the creation of the consortium in this, the UN International
Year of Biodiversity, the CITES Secretary-General, Mr Scanlon,
said: “ICCWC sends a very clear message that a new era of
wildlife law enforcement is upon us, one where wildlife criminals
will face a determined and coordinated opposition, rather than
the current situation where the risks of detection and of facing
penalties that match their crimes are often low. Poaching and
illegal trade have brought wild tigers close to the point of no
return. Only if we work together, can we ensure that tigers will
survive. Our children should inherit the privilege of looking
at tigers in the wild and not only behind bars in a zoo. Instead,
it is those criminals who poach and smuggle tigers that should
be the ones behind bars,” he added.
“The threat of wildlife and environmental crime is one
which is taken very seriously by INTERPOL as demonstrated by the
recent unanimous vote by our General Assembly in support of greater
global policing efforts in these areas,” said INTERPOL Secretary
General Ronald K. Noble. “Environmental crime is global
theft and as the world’s largest police organization INTERPOL
is committed, with the support of each of our 188 member countries,
to build on the work already being done in protecting our planet
for future generations.”
"The United Nations Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, has
asked me to convey his strong support of this timely Forum. He
welcomes this initiative and expects it to achieve tangible results,
" said Executive Director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime,
Yury Fedotov. “Wildlife crime frequently involves money
laundering, fraud, counterfeiting and violence, and in some cases
it may have links to terrorist activities or insurgencies. Ending
wildlife crime against tigers and other endangered species, particularly
transnational trafficking, requires a coordinated global response.
At the national level, we need to strengthen law enforcement capacity
to deal with this and environmental crime more broadly. Internationally,
we must encourage and develop a culture of cooperation and criminal
intelligence sharing to stop transnational trafficking in endangered
species.”
"Our wildlife is precious and an essential part of the earth's
rich biodiversity, making it incumbent upon all of us to stand
together and take concerted action to protect endangered species
from prevailing threats," said Secretary General of the WCO,
Kunio Mikuriya. "Already committed to protecting the environment,
the global Customs community is pleased to be a party to this
international consortium and I am sure that WCO Member Customs
administrations will play a key role in strengthening border controls
to combat wildlife crime through enhanced cooperation and the
active sharing of vital information, Mikuriya added.
“We know what is causing the decline in numbers of wild
tigers: illegal poaching, trafficking, and loss of habitat,"
said World Bank President Robert B. Zoellick. "But the good
news is that tiger populations can recover. We have to protect
their habitats and ranges; target illegal trade; and find ways
that people can benefit more from live tigers than dead ones.”
In the run-up to Saint Petersburg summit, an ICCWC concept group
provided enforcement-related guidance to the Global Tiger Initiative and drafted the section on combating wildlife crime in the Global
Tiger Recovery Program. The ICCWC Letter of Understanding having
been signed, the five agencies are now ready to help deliver action
on the ground to bring criminals to justice.
Although specialized staff from the five agencies have worked
together in the past to support national agencies in their efforts
to tackle the increasingly organized and sophisticated nature
of wildlife crime, this will be the first time that they work
collaboratively in this field. ICCWC will bring together the expertise
of each agency in a formidable manner.
The Letter of Understanding was signed in Lyon by the Secretary-General
of CITES, John Scanlon, and Ronald K. Noble, Secretary-General
of INTERPOL, and in Brussels by Kunio Mikuriya, Secretary General
of the World Customs Organization. Two more signatures were placed
on the Letter today: those of Yury Fedotov, Executive Director
of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, and Robert Zoellick,
President of the World Bank.
The last two signatures having been added to the document today,
the International Consortium on Combating Wildlife Crime (ICCWC)
comes into effect.
Protected from international commercial trade through a listing
in CITES Appendix I since 1975, tigers still suffer significantly
from illegal trade. They are poached for their skins and body
parts, which are used for decorative and traditional medicine
purposes.
It is almost four decades since the world realized that tiger
numbers were falling alarmingly. Since the 1970s, governments
and the conservation community have spent tens of millions of
dollars trying to save this magnificent animal. Those efforts
have unfortunately not yet lead to a reverse in the decline in
tiger populations, which is why the leaders of tiger range States
are meeting in St Petersburg this week.
Note to journalists: For more information, contact Juan Carlos
Vasquez, Communications and Outreach, CITES Secretariat, at +4179-552
27 32 (mobile), or juan.vasquez@cites.org
David Theis, Senior Communications Officer, The World Bank Group
at +202-458-8626 or
dtheis@worldbank.org
Rachel Billington, Head of Branch, Press & Communication,
at +33 4 72 44 7212 or r.billington@interpol.int
Preeta Bannerjee, Public Information Officer, UNODC, at +43-699
1459-5764 or preeta.bannerjee@unodc.org
World Customs Organization, Communications and Media, Grant Busby
/ Laure Tempier at communication@wcoomd.org
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