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http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/nature/britain-urges-asia-to-act-over-surging-trade-in-rhinoceros-horn-2337789.html
Britain urges Asia to act over
surging trade in rhinoceros horn
Belief it can cure cancer
has led to a huge rise in poaching of endangered animals
By Michael McCarthy, Environment Editor
Monday, 15 August 2011
Britain is to ask China, Vietnam and other Asian countries to
tell their citizens that rhino horn has no medicinal value, in
an attempt to halt a wave of rhino poaching that may drive the
endangered animals to extinction.
Although long known as a powdered ingredient in traditional
Asian medicine, a recent belief in its power to cure cancer has
seen prices for rhino horn surge to £50,000 a kilogram – more
than the price of gold or cocaine.
The sky-high price has sparked a spate of museum burglaries in
Britain and Europe, with mounted rhino trophy heads being
targeted for the value of the horn. More significantly, it has
directly produced a substantial surge in rhino poaching in
southern Africa.
Between 2000 and 2007, South Africa saw about 12 rhinos poached
each year, but by 2010 it had reached 333. This year, more than
200 have already been killed and conservationists are
increasingly alarmed about the future of the species, with most
of its populations already classified as critically endangered.
Now Britain is putting forward a request on behalf of the
European Union for Asian nations to mount "appropriately
targeted" awareness-raising campaigns for their citizens,
highlighting the lack of evidence in support of the horn's
alleged medicinal properties. British officials will speak at a
week-long meeting, beginning in Geneva today, of the committee
of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species
(Cites).
"The demand for rhino horn in traditional Asian medicine is
driving a new wave of poaching and the decline of rhino
populations," Richard Benyon, the UK Wildlife minister, said.
"The price is now very high. But rhino horn is basically
keratin, which is the same stuff as our hair and fingernails,
and it has no healing properties.
"The world community cannot sit back and just watch these
species disappear, and we want to help debunk the myth of rhino
horn's healing powers."
Mr Benyon denied the request would be seen as interfering in the
internal affairs of countries such as China and Vietnam. "I
don't think it is preachy – it's just asking these counties to
recognise that there is a problem within their borders," he
said.
The proposal, which Britain sponsored through the EU, also asks
all member states of Cites to tighten up controls on the trade
in rhino horn and seeks the establishment of a working group to
make recommendations for the next full meeting of Cites in two
years.
Commerce in the world's five species of rhino – white, black,
Indian, Javan and Sumatran – is banned by Cites, except for
populations of the southern white rhino in South Africa and
Swaziland, whose products can legally be traded with permits. It
is possible the next Cites meeting will change this.
Traditional Asian medicine has been blamed for forcing the
decline of other endangered species through poaching, notably
the tiger, whose body parts are prized.
The demand for rhino horn is based on what is considered a
modern urban myth, widely circulating in Asia – that a senior
politician in Vietnam who was allegedly dying of liver cancer
was cured after taking a dose of powdered rhino horn.
Although the story is frequently repeated, no one can actually
put a name to the politician, supposed to be a former Vietnamese
prime minister. Yet this has not stopped it from driving the
price to unprecedented levels.
Britain tightened its own regulations on the export of
rhinoceros horn last year after wildlife-trade officials noticed
that horn and other rhino products – such as antique trophy
heads – were beginning to fetch huge sums at auction and were
often being re-exported to the Far East.
Now it is virtually impossible to get a permit to export rhino
horn from Britain. Earlier this year, the Government persuaded
the EU to bring in a similar tightening of regulations across
its 27 member states.
Yet, at the same time, a series of targeted burglaries began in
museums holding rhino heads in Britain and in continental
Europe. Last month burglars broke into Ipswich Museum and sawed
off the 18in horn of Rosie, the head of an Indian rhino that had
been there since 1907.
In February, the mounted head of a black rhino was taken from
Sworders Fine Art Auctioneers in Stansted Mountfitchet, Essex.
And in May a similar head was taken from the Educational Museum
in Haslemere, Surrey.
In Belgium, there have been three such raids on museums in less
than two months, the most recent being 10 days ago at the Africa
Museum in Namur.
Rhinos at risk
There are five species of rhinoceros. All except the southern
species of the white rhino are regarded as threatened.
* The white rhino (Ceratotherium simum) is split between two
sub-species. The southern white is the most abundant type, with
more than 17,000 known worldwide, of which the majority are in
South Africa. By contrast, the northern white rhino is probably
extinct in the wild; four were last seen in 2006 in the
Democratic Republic of Congo but no further signs have been seen
since then, despite intensive surveys. A small number of the
animals survive in captivity.
* The black rhino (Diceros bicornis), which is found in southern
Africa, is listed as critically endangered; about 5,000 remain.
* The great Indian rhino (Rhinoceros unicornis) is found only in
India, Bhutan, Burma and Nepal and is listed as 'vulnerable';
fewer than 3,000 remain.
* The Sumatran rhino (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis) is found only in
Indonesia, Malaysia, Burma, Thailand and Vietnam and is listed
as critically endangered; perhaps fewer than 300 animals remain.
* The Javan rhinoceros (Rhinoceros sondaicus) is found only in
Indonesia and Malaysia, is critically endangered and is perhaps
the rarest large mammal on earth, with fewer than 50 of the
creatures remaining.
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