Police forces across the globe need to learn from environmental non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in investigating and exposing poachers and smugglers, according to the chief enforcer of global efforts to halt the illegal wildlife trade.
John Sellar, a former police chief from Aberdeen, Scotland, who now works for the Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), said priorities and tactics needed to change if the alarming decline in tigers and other threatened animals was to be reversed.
Speaking before the launch of a new international consortium to fight wildlife smuggling, he expressed admiration for international NGOs who work undercover to identify individuals and crime organizations that profit from the contraband sales driving much of the kill-off.
Though he did not mention any of the groups by name, Traffic, the Environment Investigation Agency and Global Witness are among the groups that have produced a series of hard-hitting studies in recent years.
“If an NGO had come to me with these kinds of reports while I was a police officer in Scotland, I would have called my staff into the office for a long shouting match and asked why they are doing what we should be doing in terms of policing,” Sellar said. “If we brought to bear the investigative skills that we bear on other criminals, we’d be infiltrating these networks and markets and taking action against them.”
CITES has joined forces with Interpol, the World Bank, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime and the World Customs Organization to coordinate and promote legal action against smugglers.
The International Consortium on Combating Wildlife Crime was to be signed yesterday at the International Tiger Forum in St Petersburg where delegates have vowed to reverse a dramatic decline that has seen the predators’ number fall by 97 percent in the past century.
“We should agree to eradicate the illegal traffic,” said Keshav Varma, director of the Global Tiger Initiative at the World Bank. “This is the cruelest thing. It has to bloody well stop. We have to come down very heavily.”
The new group aims to help national police and customs officers to launch undercover investigations, extradite suspects and follow the money trail of profits generated by smuggling.
“There is an opportunity for law-enforcement authorities to make major inroads,” said Sellar, who has worked with CITES for 13 years. “In my experience, when dealing with criminals, there are only two ways to hurt them — either lock them up or hit them in the pocket.”
Currently, he said, the wildlife trade was a source of easy money for organized crime groups because the profits were lucrative and the risk of detection was low. Even if caught, prosecutions were often difficult and penalties minimal.
“Every country could do more,” Sellar said. “There is not a single country in the world that has the response to wildlife crime right.”
Part of the problem is that police resources are often tied up with other crimes. This was particularly true after the attack on the World Trade Center in 2001, when Sellar said priorities shifted noticeably away from wildlife smuggling and are only now starting to return.
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