China, Britain and India will cooperate in an
international campaign to save endangered Tibetan antelopes
by cracking down on the trade in shahtoosh wool. This
international effort seeks to halt the trade at the sites of
capture, production and sale.
Without this drive, the
Tibetan antelope will be extinct in five years, according to
the results of an eight-month joint investigation into the
illegal trade of Tibetan antelope.
The results were
released by the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW)
and the Wildlife Trust of India (WTI) on June 27 in Beijing,
London and Delhi.
Delegates from China's government
agencies and environmental NGOs, Britain's law enforcement
authorities and India's fashion designers all expressed
their determination to strengthen protection.
Living
in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, Tibetan antelopes, which are
under protection of the Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species, number below 75,000, down from several
millions a century ago.
They were being killed at a
rate of 20,000 per year, mainly due to the large demand for
shahtoosh shawls in Western markets since the 1980s,
according to Grace Ge Gabriel, country director of IFAW in
China.
The Chinese government has exerted great
efforts to protect the animal since 1981, according to the
State Forestry Bureau. All commercial exports involving
Tibetan antelope and antelope-related products have been
prohibited in China, according to Wang Weisheng, an official
in charge of wild animal protection.
In addition,
China has opened three nature reserves in the antelope's
habitat and appointed special protection agencies to
regularly patrol the mountains to fight illegal hunting.
Since last year, the administration has allocated a
special fund for the protection of the antelope, including 2
million yuan (US$241,250) to improve the equipment of the
region's police stations, according to Cao Zhen,
vice-director of the forest police bureau.
The
Chinese officials vowed to continue to fight against the
illegal poaching, smuggling, manufacturing and sale of
antelope products.
The British law enforcement
authorities pledged to implement tougher fines and penalties
for those charged with illegal trade or possession of
shahtoosh. This stand was echoed by several countries
including China, India, Italy and the United States, in a
joint announcement made in Xining, the capital of China's
northwestern province of Qinghai.
IFAW also advised
China, Nepal, India, EU countries and other possible
shahtoosh consuming countries to vigorously enforce relevant
endangered species protection laws.