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Vanishing Species: International Experts Find Fault With CITES 'Docu

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  • Vanishing Species: International Experts Find Fault With CITES 'Docu

    VANISHING SPECIES: INTERNATIONAL EXPERTS FIND FAULT WITH CITES 'DOCUMENTS'

    Kristine Aghalaryan

    10:18, March 9, 2015

    Wild animals imported to Armenia are not only circumventing
    monitoring by the customs inspectorate but also that of the veterinary
    inspectorate.

    Staffers of the Veterinary Inspectorate, under the jurisdiction
    of the Ministry of Agriculture's Food Safety Service, must first
    register and examine such animals before being admitted to Armenia,
    Only when they are certified as free from disease are they allowed in.

    This is how the law is supposed to work. The reality on the ground
    is another matter.

    Hovhannes Lazarian, who heads the Veterinary Inspectorate, assured
    Hetq that such animals are quarantined for another month under constant
    supervision by inspectorate staffers.

    Hetq has written quite extensively regarding the import to and export
    from Armenia of endangered animal species registered in International
    Red Book. In particular, we have written about the case of 4 pygmy
    chimpanzees (bonobo), 7 common chimpanzees, 4 Diana monkeys, mandrills,
    and mangabeys imported to Armenia.

    These animals, it turns out, circumvented any veterinary monitoring
    before entering Armenia.

    Hetq wrote to the Veterinary Inspectorate, asking that it provide
    health documents regarding the bonobos (Pan paniscus) and common chimps
    (Pan troglodutes) imported to Armenia between 2010 and 2014.

    In response, the inspectorate wrote that no such animals were imported
    to Armenia in the past three years.

    Leaving aside the fact that the individual who has imported such
    animals is making a profit from them, such official negligence opens
    the door for a variety of contagious viruses to enter the country.

    Vivek Menon, the South Asia Regional Director of the International
    Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW), says that numerous diseases are
    transmitted as a result of the illegal trade of wild animals and
    birds. He says that when passengers arrive, you can check them. But
    you can't in the case of illegal shipment. That cargo can also bring
    in diseases. Essentially, monitoring of the sector is impossible. Even
    the CITES periodically says that the health of wild animals is an
    important factor on which governments must work, and that governments
    must focus on the trade in wild animals.

    In addition to the fact that Armenia's State Revenue Committee has no
    stats regarding the importation of a pygmy chimp on display at Jambo
    Exotic Park, and that a case of smuggling is now underway, scores of
    primates and monkeys are being imported with invalid documents.

    We had Charles Mackay and Elsayed Mohamed, international experst for
    the CITES, examine one such document. They found at least three errors,
    of which even one makes the document invalid.

    The following are lacking in the document:

    Exportation, importation or re-exportation permission The document
    was dated as signed after the expiration date The document's stamp
    security numbers are not the same.

    Charles Mackay has been working for the United Kingdom's Revenue and
    Customs for the past 36 years and has served as a CITES expert for the
    past twenty. When Hetq asked Mr. Mackay how he would react to such a
    document in the case of the United Kingdom, he said, "Seeing all this,
    we would immediately raise the alarm and respond by sending inquiries
    to the exporter country. This is an unacceptable and invalid document."

    Examining the legal permits of Armenia's Ministry of Nature
    Protection, the state agency tasked with coordinating implementation
    of CITES provisions in the country, we also came across a number of
    impermissible errors. (Hetq obtained these documents after a one year
    Freedom of Information court case).

    According to the experts, the document must show the details of the
    importer and exporter. In the document below, the same person, Armen
    Khachatryan, appears as both importer and exporter. This, in their
    estimation, is unacceptable.

    Despite the fact that Armenia signed the CITES (the Convention on
    International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora) in
    2009, it doesn't know where such endangered animals are disappearing
    to once having reached its shores.

    Hetq spoke to the three experts, who had come to Armenia as part
    of a five day training course organized by the Foundation for the
    Preservation of Wildlife and Cultural Assets (FPWC) regarding the
    prevention of the illegal trade of wildlife. The training was funded
    by Armenia's Ministry of Nature Protection and the International Fund
    for Animal Welfare.

    http://hetq.am/eng/news/58899/vanishing-species-international-experts-find-fault-with-cites-documents.html

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