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New UN database to help combat wildlife crime

AMSTERDAM
Mon Jun 4, 2007 11:09am EDT

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - The United Nations University unveiled a new database on wildlife crime on Monday to help Interpol combat the multi-billion dollar illegal trade in animals and plants.

Green Business

The database is part of a project to compile and analyze data on wildlife crime provided by private and non-governmental organizations around the world, and to put an exact value on the illegal trade, estimated by some at over $20 billion per year.

The growing black market in wildlife has become the world's third biggest source of criminal income after drugs and guns, experts say.

"Quantifying levels of wildlife crime has never before been possible," Remi Chandran, research associate at the United Nations University, said in a statement.

The international police agency Interpol says on its website that the true value of illegal wildlife trade may never be known as much of it occurs in less developed parts of the world, but that it may be significantly higher than the $20 billion estimate.

The new U.N. database, supported by the International Fund for Animal Welfare, is intended to improve on Interpol's own database, which relies on information submitted by national authorities and is only shared among them.

Interpol praised the new model as promising and said it would consider using it.

The project will raise awareness about the black market in animals and plants by sharing information with the public, not just with governments, the statement said.

The new database system was presented on the sidelines of a June 3-15 meeting of the 171-nation Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) in The Hague.

Contraband, from elephant ivory to the organs of endangered tigers, can sell for more than its weight in gold, driven mainly by Chinese demand that has surged in line with the country's expanding economy, scientists and environmentalists say.

Rare breeds have been decimated because of demand not only from China but also from Westerners wanting alternative treatment with products made of tiger bone, rhino horn and bear bile.

Since 1970, about 98 percent of the world's black rhino have been killed for their horns -- largely to supply the Chinese medicine trade. Only 5,000 to 7,000 tigers are estimated to be left in the wild, compared with 100,000 in 1990.



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