Over
30 pangolins die in Vietnam reserve due to legal issues
This file photo shows pangolins
seized in a wildlife trafficking case in Vietnam. Tuoi Tre
More than 30 pangolins, an
endangered wildlife species, have died at a park in northern Vietnam after
living in captivity for months instead of being released to their natural
habitat, as a result of law inflexibility, a wildlife official has
said.
These wild animals have died over the past two months,
as they could not adapt to the captive environment at the Cuc Phuong National
Park in the northern province of Ninh Binh, Tran Quang Phuong, who manages
the Carnivore & Pangolin Conservation Program, a cooperative program
between the park and Save Vietnam’s Wildlife, said on Tuesday.
Save Vietnam’s Wildlife is a national non-profit
organization, committed to protecting and increasing the population of
threatened wildlife in the Southeast Asian country by rescuing endangered
animals, protecting their entire population and ensuring their secured
habitats, according to its website.
The dead anteaters were among more than 70 pangolins
that were rescued from illegal wildlife trade rackets and brought to the
reserve three months ago, Phuong said.
The program had proposed that police and forest
protection agencies allow the park managers to release these pangolins to
nature, but they rejected the proposition because of a law restriction, he
elaborated.
Pursuant to current regulations, such animals are the
exhibits in criminal cases and they will be released only when the cases have
been tried by courts and when a decision on handling them has been issued
thereafter, Phuong explained.
A consequence of the wait is the death of the
pangolins, Phuong said, adding that the remaining 40 pangolins are in good
health condition and will be released to nature when allowed by competent
bodies.
The prolonging of the captivity of the pangolins not
only poses threats to their life but also cause the park management to incur
further expenses for feeding them, according to the program manager.
The cost of food for a pangolin is VND1.4 million
(US$63) per month, he said.
Law amendment needed
“We have proposed that competent agencies make a
decision urgently to set free these precious, rare and endangered wild
animals to nature, but our expectation has not been met,” Phuong said.
Nguyen Van Thai, director of Save Vietnam’s Wildlife,
said that pangolins confiscated from illegal wildlife trade rings should be
sent back to their natural habitat as soon as possible.
This move has been applied in many other countries in
the world and Vietnam should make changes to its relevant laws to follow
suit.
Competent agencies should keep images of the wild
animals seized from illegal traders, along with other necessary information
about them, as the evidence for trials, instead of keeping them in captivity
like the present.
Lawyer Vo Xuan Trung, from the Ho Chi Minh City Bar
Association, confirmed to Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper that animals
taken away from wildlife traffickers are considered exhibits, pursuant to the
Criminal Procedure Code, and such exhibits can be handled only after the
cases are tried.
However, investigative bodies can still issue decisions
to release such animals to nature by making the best use of Point d, Item 2,
Article 76 of the code, which refers to “exhibits being easy-to-deteriorate
or difficult-to-preserve goods,” lawyer Trung said.
Tuoi Tre News
|
Thứ Năm, 12 tháng 11, 2015
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét