November 2010
Kuwait City, Kuwait. The Kuwait Society for the Protection of Animals and Their Habitat (K’S PATH) has prompted the first ever confiscation of a mammal under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Flora and Fauna (CITES) agreements.
Beginning in May of this year, K’S PATH began receiving calls from concerned citizens regarding the sale of a Eurasian Brown Bear (pictured) being offered for the sum of KD2000. K’S PATH launched an extensive investigation aimed at locating the bear and helping the government to seize the animal. The investigation discovered the bear living in a small cage in Kebd, exposed to the sun, chained by the neck, living on a diet of rice, and only offered water twice per day. After reviewing the evidence presented by K’S PATH, the MOI Police force, along with representatives from the Kuwait Environment Protection Agency and the Kuwait Zoo began the process of confiscating the bear and several other illegal animals being housed at the same location. The bear is now being housed in the Kuwait Zoo, and K’S PATH is attempting to find a suitable sanctuary in the natural range of the Eurasian Brown Bear.
The illegal trade in wildlife is a major concern around the world, raking in over 10 billion US Dollars per year, making it the third most lucrative illegal trade behind the arms and drug trades. According to the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS):
“Today, anything large enough to be eaten or lucrative enough to be sold is hunted on a massive scale for its meat, skin, fur or feathers, for the pet trade, or as an ingredient in traditional medicines,” said Elizabeth Bennett, director for WCS’s Hunting and Wildlife Trade Program. “Wildlife populations are crashing, and wild areas increasingly are losing their wildlife, becoming devoid of vibrancy and life.”
The seizure of this bear in Kuwait represents a significant step forward in the fight against illegal animal trafficking. In the past decade, Kuwait has become a significant importer in the trade. Available on Kuwait’s black market are lions, tigers, cheetahs, white lions, white tigers, bears, jaguars, endangered birds, gazelles, jackals, chimpanzees, baboons, and all manner of other illegal endangered or protected animals. Most animals are stolen from their mothers while they are still small enough to fit into tiny smuggling compartments, in suitcase linings, or in specialized pockets beneath travelers’ clothes. The result is mortality among smuggled endangered species in excess of 80%.
LWDLIK -
This story is a few years old but with all the exotic dangerous animals that are being imported into the Gulf these days it's relevance highlights the ridiculous and cruel lengths people will go to...
This is from 2009...
ReplyDeleteOops.. no wonder I didn't see him up there today. Thanks for the info :O)
DeleteIt is good that you posted an old story because it reminds us, yet again, these stories we hear about are infact true. I never believed it possible until a few days ago, my husband amd I were on route to Al Manshar when I noticed two cars infront what looked like a stuffed toy..... On closer look it turned out to be a friggin leopard- why, oh why?! I have no idea how people can keep these animals as pets.... Or attempt to.
ReplyDeleteHi Umkhaloodie
DeleteThanks for the comment.
Seems to be in the news a lot lately. I posted something else just recently about lions and tigers being abandonded, all over the Gulf area, once they got too big. I've heard many stories, I've seen a pic of a leopord/cheetah in a car in Kuwait, white Asian tigers publicly for sale here and K'S PATH have even had hyenas brought in. After I posted about the white tigers for sale I even had people enquire with me to buy them(?).
I wonder if that's the same leopard or another. Do the police not see them? Or care?
:O(
Sry typo leopard ;O)
Delete