Status, not health,
motivates Vietnamese to kill rhinos
A South African protester holds a sign and a
fake rhino horn during a demonstration outside the Chinese embassy in
New international research appears to confirm the widely-held belief that regardless of what people say about “health benefits,” the desire of wealthy urban Vietnamese to show off is the strongest driver of the rhino poaching crisis that has bedeviled both
The research,
funded by the World Wide Fund for Nature South Africa (WWF-SA), surveyed 720
people in
While their
reasons for purchasing and consuming rhino horn are linked to an underlying
belief in its medicinal properties, the dominant current trend is to use the
dead animal to enhance social standing, according to the survey.
“Research reveals
that typical users of rhino horn are successful, well-educated men, over the
age of 40 who live in
“They value their
luxury lifestyle, which is often based around meeting peer group pressures
and tend to view animals as commodities to serve functional and
income-generating purposes rather than feeling an emotional connection,” Shaw
said.
Independent
conservationists have endorsed the research, saying it is the first
comprehensive survey into the use of rhino horn in
“There is nothing
new in the report that we do not know already,” said Douglas Hendrie, an
American technical advisor for Education for Nature-Vietnam, one of
“But this is
important to have it independently verified through a scientific survey. A
very good thing for everybody,” he told Vietweek.
In
“Nowadays, bribes
for officials are disguised in the form of not only gifts, luxury vacations
and cars, but also rhino horns, bear bile, or tiger bone paste,” said Le Nhu
Tien, an outspoken lawmaker who has been vocal on the issue since last year.
It’s glorious to be rich... except for rhinos
Perhaps one of the
most significant findings of the research is that the number of potential
buyers and consumers of rhino horn could triple that of those who are
currently buying and using it.
Of 720 people
surveyed, five percent admitted to buying or consuming rhino horn. But among
those not currently using rhino horn, 16 percent are “intenders”, individuals
who said they wanted to buy or consume rhino horn in the future.
With the increase
of wealth in
“This is
definitely one of the most depressing results from the survey,” Naomi Doak,
coordinator of the Southeast Asia-Greater Mekong Program at the international
wildlife monitoring network TRAFFIC, told Vietweek.
International debacle
On the day the
research was released, a 29-year-old Vietnamese national was arrested trying
to smuggle five rhino horns out of
Kenya Wildlife
Service spokesman Paul Muya told Capital FM News that Le Manh Cuong was found
in possession of the five pieces of rhino horns weighing 20.1kgs packed in a
hand-drawn suitcase stuffed with mattress cuttings to disguise the
contraband.
International
conservation groups have identified
Conservationists
are looking to make the most of the findings of the WWF-SA research to beef
up the combination of enhanced law enforcement and demand-reduction campaigns
to shift attitudes and behaviors against the trend in rhino horn use within
the growing middle-class in
However, according
to figures released by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species (CITES), 657 rhino horns were legally imported from South Africa into
Vietnam as hunting trophies between 2003 and 2010.
But the figure
recorded by Vietnamese authorities is only 170, meaning that the remaining
horns, whose value for the purpose of import taxes has been estimated at US$2
million, were not declared.
Vietnamese were
second only to US hunters in terms of the number of rhino hunts undertaken in
Conservation
groups have urged
It is only through
the profits from regulated trophy hunting that farmers started stocking,
breeding and conserving rhinos, they say.
But Allan
Thornton, president of the Environmental Investigation Agency, an environmental
group based in
“[That] has
directly led to the poaching crisis the country and other rhino range states
are currently experiencing.”
By An Dien,
Thanh Nien News
|
Thứ Bảy, 21 tháng 9, 2013
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