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![]() By Dmitry ZAKS London (AFP) Oct 11, 2018
Prince William and US Attorney General Jeff Sessions called on Thursday for the international community to crack down on trafficking that is driving elephants and tigers to extinction. The Illegal Wildlife Trade conference drew royals, presidents and ministers from 80 nations to London to debate how to save endangered animals and better track financial transactions from wildlife smuggling gangs. "It is heartbreaking to think that by the time my children, George, Charlotte and Louis are in their 20s, animals, rhinos and tigers might well be extinct in the wild," Prince William said. Sessions came to London as head of a US team spearheading global efforts to fight transnational criminal gangs whose wildlife trafficking business is broadly estimated to be worth between $17 billion and $26 billion (14.7 and 22.5 billion euros). "The only time criminals care about borders is when they hide behind them. It's our job to stop them," Sessions said. "We cannot allow the illegal extermination of entire populations of species." Experts now believe criminal networks trafficking arms and people are also involved in wildlife poaching and black market animal product sales. - Beyond lip service - Prince William on Wednesday signed up 20 of some of the world's largest banks to a commitment to better track financial transactions from illegal wildlife trade networks. In a statement, the banks said they "will not knowingly facilitate or tolerate financial flows that are derived from illegal wildlife trade and associated corruption." The bank taskforce is headed by former British foreign secretary William Hague. "We are following the commodity. We are not following the money at the moment," Hague said. US intelligence analyst Gloria Freund said this approach should interest global crime fighters because it will also help track major arms and drug smugglers. The international security community must realise that "wildlife is the most visible data point ... that could lead us to other threats topping the priority list," she said. Animal protection group leaders said they were starting to see tangible progress after decades of nations paying lip service to fighting the illicit wildlife trade. "It's about attacking the enablers instead of the facilitators of wildlife crime," World Wildlife Fund's crime initiative leader Rob Parry-Jones told AFP. "These things do gradually build a certain momentum and political will."
![]() ![]() India watches for deadly virus as lion deaths spike Ahmedabad, India (AFP) Oct 2, 2018 Ten endangered Asiatic lions have died in the last two weeks in India, authorities confirmed Tuesday, four of them from a virus that killed around 1,000 lions in Tanzania in the 1990s. The new deaths take the toll at the Gir sanctuary in the western Gujarat state, home to India's entire population of around 500 wild Asiatic lions, to 21 since September. India's National Institute of Virology determined that the canine distemper virus was responsible for four of the 10 latest deaths, Gujarat envi ... read more
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