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  • Armenia: Shady Import Of Lions And Tigers Raises Fears

    ARMENIA: SHADY IMPORT OF LIONS AND TIGERS RAISES FEARS

    EurasiaNet.org
    Oct 24 2014

    October 24, 2014 - 12:23pm, by Marianna Grigoryan

    The Yerevan neighbors of parliamentarian Mher Sedrakian, a member
    of the ruling Republican Party of Armenia, have a persistent problem
    with noise. But this is not about wild parties or car horns. Rather,
    it is about lions.

    Sedrakian's alleged collection of lions, apparently kept as personal
    pets, constantly roars and scares the neighborhood, and no one can
    get them to stop, his neighbors complained to EurasiaNet.org recently.

    Increasingly, many Armenians can understand that concern. Private
    zoos with lions, tigers and bears are emerging as a popular hobby
    for the wealthy and powerful in this tiny, South-Caucasus country,
    and the government does not seem inclined to intervene.

    Instead, recent amendments to the Law on Wildlife, passed on April 12,
    could facilitate this pastime. Private citizens can own wild animals,
    including endangered species, if they have areas for the animals
    that ensure their "life, health and safety," and prevent escape from
    captivity, the law reads. Supervision is supposed to be "constant."

    But it is not. Last November, tiger cubs were found in the streets
    of Etchmiadzin, a town about 20 kilometers from the capital, Yerevan,
    local media reported.

    Although tigers, as an endangered species, cannot be exported from
    the wild, their import from zoos is allowed.

    A search of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered
    Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) database for 2008 to 2013
    shows the import of six tigers to Armenia, including three Siberian
    tigers from Ukraine. The rest came from Belgium, Chile and Kazakhstan.

    An Armenian Border Guard official, who declined to be named, explained
    to EurasiaNet.org that a tiger can be brought into the country if
    documents show its country of origin and demonstrate that it is the
    third generation of a zoo-based line of tigers.

    A CITES certificate that authorizes the animal's shipment is
    also required, said Hovhannes Mkrtchian, head of the Ministry of
    Agriculture's Food Security Department, which checks import documents
    and verifies the animals' health.

    But investigative reports by the news site Hetq.am indicate that
    not all of the exotic animals imported into Armenia - namely, an
    endangered bonobo - end up in the CITES database.

    Similarly, though crocodiles were offered for sale in Yerevan
    supermarkets last December for New Year's, the database contains no
    mention of their import as food products.

    It does, however, show an array of exotic imports. Cheetahs topped
    the feline list, with 18 imports from the United Arab Emirates and
    South Africa between 2008 and 2013. Nine lions were brought in during
    the same period; most from the United Arab Emirates.

    Forty-one dumbo-eared fennec foxes, natives of the Sahara, entered
    Armenia between 2009 and 2010, while 21 rheas, ostrich-like birds
    from South America, made the trip in 2012.

    Whether or not these animals were meant for the Yerevan Zoo was not
    immediately clear.

    Yerevan Zoo Director Ruben Khachatrian emphasized that his zoo is
    "making every effort to meet international standards," and expressed
    regret that Armenia has developed a reputation for an illegal trade
    in wild animals.

    "Because of certain persons, Armenia has a bad international image
    in terms of the unlawful trade in animals..." Khachatrian said.
    "[Individuals] can approach you at international conferences and ask
    with anxiety, 'What is going on in your country?'"

    The government launched a criminal investigation into the import of
    animals to Armenia after a Hetq.am investigation, but no breakthroughs
    have been announced. Caution could well temper prosecutors' questions.

    Among those Armenians known to have a taste for exotic wildlife is
    one of the country's most powerful political players, millionaire
    businessman Gagik Tsarukian, head of the opposition Prosperous
    Armenia Party.

    A 2009 YouTube video that showed a donkey placed in a cage of lions was
    widely reputed to have been filmed at Tsarukian's Yerevan residence,
    which contains a private zoo.

    His spokesperson, Iveta Tonoian, denied any connection to the case,
    but has stated that Tsarukian owns about two dozen lions and white
    tigers, which live "in perfect conditions."

    Tsarukian is not alone in his tastes. Former Deputy Defense
    Minister Lieutenant General Manvel Grigorian, head of an influential
    organization of Karabakh-war veterans, keeps tigers, lions, bears
    and various birds in a private zoo in Etchmiadzin, a town about 20
    kilometers from Yerevan.

    According to Hetq.am, an allegedly toothless tiger also protects
    Grigorian's Etchmiadzin house. The tiger cub found wandering in the
    town last year is believed to have belonged to the general, who has
    not responded to the allegations.

    But holding any political figure to account on such a score is
    difficult.

    The government never responded to environmentalists' requests to see
    the documentation for the endangered brown bears allegedly owned by
    Tavush Region Governor Hovik Abovian.

    The agriculture ministry's Mkrtchian, however, maintains that
    "everything is done in accordance with procedures."

    "We do everything we can to ensure safety," he said.

    But it does not always work. In 2012, a lion, allegedly owned by a
    former police colonel, seriously injured a two-year-old child in a
    village not far from the Turkish border.

    Environmentalist Silva Adamian, one of the few Armenian activists
    following this issue, argues that the Law on Wildlife simply does
    not work.

    "Legislators should have the leverage to control the field, whereas
    the opposite is happening..." said Adamian.

    Dining establishments throughout the country offer the meat of bears,
    boars and deer, all endangered in Armenia, on their menus. Bears
    also provide entertainment. They also can be spotted on the loose in
    Yerevan itself - twice within the last year.

    No parliamentarian working on environmental issues could comment to
    EurasiaNet.org about these practices.

    Civil society groups are not prepared to take up the issue either,
    claimed Adamian.

    "The field is controlled by certain influential people, while society
    is so busy with other problems that it simply has no time to take an
    interest in these issues," she said.

    Meanwhile, the imports continue.

    Editor's note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based in
    Yerevan and editor of MediaLab.am.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/70596




    From: A. Papazian
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