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Wildlife group targets Burma tiger trade
Wildlife trafficking officials have reached a preliminary agreement with an ethnic minority group in Burma to close down markets where tigers are sold.
Wildlife trafficking officials say they have reached a preliminary agreement with an ethnic minority group in Burma to close down markets where hundreds of poached tigers from across Asia are sold for use in purported medicines and aphrodisiacs in China.
The markets, in an area of northeastern Burma controlled by the Wa minority, are considered one of the world's hot spots for wildlife trafficking, and among the only places left where tiger parts are openly sold.
"Basically closing these markets will alleviate pressure on all of South-East Asia's tiger populations because the sourcing is being done from areas as far away as India and Sumatra," William Schaedla, of the wildlife trade monitoring group TRAFFIC, said on Friday. "If we were to close these markets, it would stop the drain on those source populations of tigers."
Schaedla, TRAFFIC's South-East Asia director, spoke ahead of a "tiger summit" in St Petersburg, Russia, aimed at saving the endangered species from extinction. There are believed to be as few as 3200 wild tigers remaining, down from about 100,000 a century ago - a decline of 97 per cent.
The November 21-24 conference, hosted by Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, will attempt to finalise a plan to double the number of tigers in the wild by 2022. It is being described as the first international meeting on a single wildlife species.
"If the markets are not closed, we will see the end of all tigers," Schaedla told a press conference on Friday. None of the goals set at the St Petersburg summit can be reached if the illegal wildlife trade in the Thailand-Burma-China border region is not stopped, he said.
A TRAFFIC report released on Friday said in a decade-long investigation, hundreds of parts of more than 400 big cats were seen in the Burma-China border town of Mong La, controlled by the Wa, and Tachilek, on Burma's border with Thailand.
Some traders operated small warehouses with shelves of rolled-up tiger and leopard skins. Bones, paws, penises and teeth were also found, used for home decor, magic amulets and products advertised as health tonics and aphrodisiacs, the report said.
The wildlife trade is especially rife in the Wa region, with Chinese traders coming to Mong La to buy and eat wild animals, gamble and consort with prostitutes in what TRAFFIC investigators described as a "wild west" atmosphere. Tiger bone wine is a popular drink with those out for sex.
The Wa, who have forged a semi-autonomous region and field a powerful army, have long been accused of massive drug trafficking.
"They're interested in establishing contact with the outside world, and this is a much less contentious issue than some of the other things that they're facing, such as human trafficking or drugs or some of the other crime issues. And it's perhaps also a much more straightforward issue for them to take care of," Schaedla said, explaining why the Wa may want to make a deal to shut down the markets.
Schaedla said he was cautiously optimistic the Wa could be trusted to keep the agreement with TRAFFIC, a joint program of WWF and the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
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