Vietnam’s tiger farms are called trafficking hubs
Topics: From the Wires, News
ENBARGOED UNTIL 0001GMT of July 23, 2012 - In this July 4, 2012, photo, caretaker Lai Van Xa provokes a tiger with his plastic sandal at a tiger farm in southern Binh Duong province, Vietnam. The farm in An Binh commune is one of the country's 11 registered captive tiger facilities. Vietnam and neighboring countries say bringing rare animals into captivity can reduce hunting pressure on endangered wild populations. But international wildlife experts say that in Asia, such facilities often facilitate laundering of wild-caught animals into a bustling illegal wildlife trade. (AP Photo/Mike Ives)(Credit: Mike Ives)AN BINH, Vietnam (AP) — Nineteen tigers prowl outdoor cages the size of dormitory rooms, nibbling frayed wire fences and roaring at a caretaker who taunts them with his sandal.
It looks like a zoo, but it’s closed to the public. The facility breeds tigers, but has never supplied a conservation program with any animals nor sold any to zoos.
Conservationists allege that Vietnam’s 11 registered tiger farms, including this one, are fronts for a thriving illegal market in tiger parts, highly prized for purported — if unproven — medicinal qualities.
Nonsense, says manager Luong Thien Dan. He says the farm in southern Binh Duong province was created simply because its management has a “soft spot” for the big cats, and that it’s funded privately by a beer company.
“At first we just kept them as pets, but when they started to breed, we got excited and wanted to expand their population,” Dan said during a tour of the farm, about 40 kilometers (25 miles) from Ho Chi Minh City.
The illegal wildlife trade is worth an estimated $8 billion to $10 billion per year in Southeast Asia alone and includes tigers, rhinos and other lesser-known animals.
The conservationists say the loosely regulated farms are used to “launder” illegally caught wild tigers, which they say are mixed in with stocks of legitimately bred animals, and that products from their carcasses are later sold on the black market.
The conservation group WWF this week ranked Vietnam as the worst country for wildlife crime in its first such survey of how well 23 countries in Asia and Africa protect rhinos, tigers and elephants. The Switzerland-based group focused its report released Monday on countries where the threatened animals live in the wild or are traded or consumed. Vietnam’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a written request for comment on the WWF report.
However, the government has commented on the tiger farms, saying in a 2009 report that they are aimed at breeding tigers for “future reintroduction programs.” No captive tiger has been successfully introduced to a wild population anywhere in the world.
Some proponents of wildlife farms argue that they can ease the pressure on wild populations by lessening the demand for poached animals.
But in Asia, such farms are largely unregulated and create “an avenue for trade in something that you shouldn’t be trading in,” said Vincent Nijman, a wildlife trade expert at Oxford Brookes University in England.




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