Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Web: Drugs Fuel Illegal Animal Trade
Title:UK: Web: Drugs Fuel Illegal Animal Trade
Published On:2002-06-17
Source:BBC News (UK Web)
Fetched On:2008-01-23 04:17:42
DRUGS FUEL ILLEGAL ANIMAL TRADE

Criminal gangs are using the same smuggling routes they use to
transport drugs and arms to also smuggle wild animal products.

The claim is made in a new report from Traffic, the wildlife trade
monitoring programme.

The group says the gangs, including the Russian mafia, are making huge
profits from the activity, which threatens many endangered species.

"The profits, sometimes worth up to 800%, combined with the low risks
of detection and lack of serious punishment make illegal wildlife
trade very attractive to criminals," said Stuart Chapman, WWF-UK Head
of Species Programme.

Traffic says the present laws are very slack and criminals breaching
them are not punished at all severely.

The group is encouraging the British public to write to their local
MPs expressing their wishes for more strict laws and law
enforcement.

Animal Guards

Not only are endangered species being smuggled from country to country
dead and alive, but they are also being used to guard and conceal
drugs, says Traffic.

One shipment of boa-constrictors was searched and it was found that
each snake had condom-wrapped pellets of heroin inside its gut.

The packages had been inserted through the rectum which had then been
sewn up. All the snakes died.

Another incident involved some venomous snakes guarding a package of
heroin which was hidden in their cage.

The snakes were acting as a deterrent to put security guards off
searching the cage.

Money Laundering

Rare and valuable animals are being used as a currency by the
smugglers and are often directly exchanged for drugs.

For example, Traffic says, "plane loads" of smuggled birds from
Australia have been exchanged for heroin in Bangkok, with the drugs
being flown back to Australia for sale.

Some of the animal smuggling organisations are used as a front to
launder money from drugs sales.

All of these animals are rare and valuable, and by smuggling them out
of their native countries their safety is being further jeopardised.
Member Comments
No member comments available...