Traffic-Global transport leaders sign historic declaration in fight to shut down illegal wildlife trafficking routes

 

 

London, UK, 15th March 2016—The signing of a new declaration committing leaders of the global transportation industry to major steps to fight wildlife trafficking has been hailed by The Duke of Cambridge as “a game changer in the race against extinction.”

 

Forty CEOs and other senior figures of airlines, shipping firms, port operators, Customs agencies, intergovernmental organizations and conservation charities, including TRAFFIC, have become the founding signatories of the Declaration of the United for Wildlife International Taskforce on the Transportation of Illegal Wildlife Products during an event that took place today at Buckingham Palace.

 

The Buckingham Palace Declaration is the result of a year’s worth of meetings, research, and coalition building by the United for Wildlife Transport Taskforce, convened by The Duke of Cambridge and chaired at His Royal Highness’s request by Lord Hague of Richmond. Transport representatives on the Taskforce include companies and organizations based in China, Denmark, Kenya, UAE, the UK and USA.

 

The Buckingham Palace Declaration commits signatories to eleven commitments that will raise standards across the transportation industry to prevent traffickers from exploiting weaknesses as they seek to move their products covertly from killing field to marketplace. The commitments focus on information sharing, staff training, technological improvements, and resource sharing across companies and organizations worldwide. They will also see the world’s leading transportation firms assisting those in poorer nations who are in need of expertise and new systems.

 

The commitments in the Buckingham Palace Declaration include:

•    Developing information sharing systems for the transport industry to receive credible information about high risk routes and methods of transportation

•    Supporting a secure system for passing information about suspected illegal wildlife trade from the transport sector to relevant customs and law enforcement authorities

•    Notifying relevant law enforcement authorities of cargoes suspected of containing illegal wildlife and their products and, where able, refuse to accept or ship such cargoes.

 

The work of the United for Wildlife Transport Taskforce has been strongly supported not only by the transport sector but a number of intergovernmental agencies including the World Customs Organization, the United Nations Development Programme and the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES)—the world's regulatory instrument on trade in endangered species.

 

The Duke of Cambridge said: “The poaching crisis is bringing violence, death, and corruption to many vulnerable communities. It threatens to rob future generations of their livelihoods in those regions where wildlife tourism is the core of local economies.

 

“But this crisis can be stopped. We know where the animals are that we need to protect. We know where the markets for wildlife products are and where awareness, education, and law enforcement need to be improved. And with the Buckingham Palace Declaration being signed today, global transport leaders are saying we know many of the ways wildlife products are being moved from killing field to market place.

 

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