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MEPs Call For End To Illegal Wildlife Trade By 2025

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MEPs have called for an end to all illegal wildlife trade by 2025 ahead of a major global United Nations meeting.

Parliament is demanding stepping up the fight against illegal trafficking of wild fauna and flora, in order to improve the global protection of endangered species. It adopted its position on the EU’s strategic objectives by 549 votes to 28 and 50 abstentions.

The upcoming UN meeting is a convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, to be held in Panama on 14th to 25th November.

MEPs want to go further than reduce illegal trade in CITES-listed wildlife species and eliminate it altogether – so that by 2025 there would only be legal and sustainable trade in wild fauna and flora.

MEPs think that this is necessary because of the threat posed by the wildlife trade to individual animals and species, and to human and animal health and the environment.

The pandemic has brought into focus the risk of animal-to-human zoonotic disease transmission, which is linked to the global wildlife trade.

MEPs also emphasised the important role that CITES should play in preventing future pandemics, as the world’s wildlife trade regulator.

Parliament also expressed a concern that the market for exotic pets and the range of affected species being traded are growing both in the EU and internationally.

The recent resolution calls on all countries to significantly improve their enforcement of the UN Convention, as the current application of bans and restrictions on the trade in protected species is inadequate due to a lack of resources.

To successfully combat the involvement of organised criminal groups, MEPs say that transnational wildlife crime should be recognised as a serious organised crime under the UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime.

Parliament is therefore calling on the EU to review and expand the existing legislation regulating wildlife trade to make it illegal to import, export, sell, acquire or buy wild animals or plants that are taken, possessed, transported or sold in violation of the law of the country of origin or transit.

They also want dissuasive sanctions, in cases of non-compliance, urgent action to ban the import of hunting trophies of CITES-listed species, and the creation of a science-based EU-wide approved list of animals allowed as pets.

Only animals where trade does not cause harm to wild populations and to European biodiversity should be on the list.

MEPs welcome the renewed commitment to the EU Action Plan against Wildlife Trafficking but stress the need for adequate funding and clear and implementable targets and actions as well as a monitoring and evaluation mechanism.

Do you agree with the resolution?

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Sasha is a writer, creator, and podcast host interested in environmental matters, humans, and art. Some know her as Sasha tas-Sigar. Inspired by nature and the changing world. Follow her on Instagram at @saaxhaa and send her your stories at [email protected]

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