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2024 World Wildlife Crime Report

2024 World Wildlife Crime Report

Context

Recently, the World Wildlife Crime Report 2024 was launched by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) in Vienna, Austria. 

Relevance For Prelims: WJC Report, United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Amendments In Wildlife Trade Rules, Article 51 A (g), Article 48 A of the constitution, and Rethinking Wildlife Capture And Rescue Strategies.

Relevance For Mains: Driving Factors for Wildlife Crime,Impact of Wildlife Trade on the Environment, Organized Crime

About the 2024 World Wildlife Crime Report

World Wildlife Crime Report 2024 is the third report in a series following the 2020 and 2016 publications.

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Crucial Insights on the World Wildlife Crime Report 2024

  • Persistence of Wildlife Trafficking: Wildlife trafficking persists worldwide despite two decades of concerted action at international and national levels. 
  • Wildlife In Seizure: Elephants, crocodilian species, corals, carnivores, snakes, turtles, rosewood, pangolins, turtles and tortoises and bivalve molluscs were figured most commonly in seizures made of wildlife and their body parts.
  • Role of Corruption & Technology: Corruption undermines regulation and enforcement while technology accelerates the capacity of traffickers to reach global markets.
  • Impacts Observed: In many cases, illegal trade appeared to have contributed to local or global extinctions of species, disrupted ecosystems, and undermined the many socioeconomic benefits that people derive from nature.  

About Wildlife Trade and Wildlife Crime

  • Wildlife Trade: It Involves the sale and exchange of wild animals and plants, including live specimens, parts, derivatives, or transformed products.
  • Occurrence: At various levels, from local to global.
  • Regulation: Regulated internationally by CITES. 
  • Wildlife Trade in India: India is one of the top 20 countries for wildlife trafficking and one of the top 10 for wildlife trafficking by air. International wildlife trafficking into and out of India mainly occurs through either the Northeast or through airports. 
    • Chennai and Mumbai airports are major hubs for this illegal activity
  • Major Trafficking Routes: India too has seen a spate of wildlife seizures at airports, seaports and land borders, especially in states such as Mizoram and Manipur. 
    • As per the Smuggling in India Report 2022-23, the Department of Revenue Intelligence seized 1,652 mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibian species in 2022-23. About 40% of the seizures were classified as threatened or near threatened species.
  • Wildlife Crime: A significant environmental crime encompassing violations of national, regional, or international laws protecting wildlife species.

Status of Wildlife & Associated Crime

  • Statistics Wildlife Crime in India: India is a bio-diverse country, with nearly 6.5% of the world’s known wildlife species. Approximately, 7.6% of the world’s mammals and 12.6% of the world’s birds are found in India. 
    • The illicit demand, globally, for wildlife and its products has seen the rise of wildlife crime across the subcontinent.
  • Decline in the World Wildlife: According to WWF’s “Living Planet Report, 2020,” monitored population sizes of various species have declined by an average of 68% between 1970 and 2016.
  • A United Nations-backed panel, Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), reported in 2019 that up to one million plant and animal species face extinction, with many at risk within decades.
  • IUCN’s Red List of Threatened Species indicates that over 41,000 species, or 28% of all assessed species, are threatened with extinction.

Provision to Check Wildlife Crime

  • Global Cooperation in Combating Wildlife Crime:
    • International Consortium on Combating Wildlife Crime (ICCWC)
    • ASEAN Wildlife Enforcement Network (ASEAN-WEN)
    • South Asia Wildlife Enforcement Network (SAWEN)
    • UN Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime (UNTOC), 2000
    • TRAFFIC (Trade Records Analysis of Flora and Fauna in Commerce)
  • Legal Framework in India:
    • Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972: India has a robust legal and policy framework to regulate and restrict wildlife trade. 
    • CITES Membership: India has been a member of CITES since 1976. 
    • The Wildlife Crime Control Bureau (WCCB): It is a statutory multi-disciplinary body under the Ministry of Environment and Forests, to combat organized wildlife crime in the country.

Driving Factors for Wildlife Crime

  • Bribery and Corruption: Corruption is a major driver in terrestrial wildlife crimes, fisheries, and timber. It facilitates illegal activities at every step of the supply chain, including poaching, transportation, processing, and product sales.
  • Money Laundering:
    • Attractiveness to Organized Crime: Wildlife crime is lucrative, attracting organized crime groups due to the potential for large profits with relatively low risk.
    • Laundering of Illicit Financial Flows: High prices for wildlife products like rhino horn and ivory suggest substantial illicit financial flows that may be laundered to conceal their illegal origins.
  • Limited Financial Investigations: Many countries do not conduct financial investigations to identify the proceeds of crime or potential money laundering offenses linked to wildlife crime.
    • Examples: The United States is one of the few countries that conducts financial investigations.
  • Difference in Legislative Framework: One of the main problems that investigators face worldwide is the difference in the legal status of wild animals in various countries. 
    • When the trade of an animal, protected in one country, is not restricted under CITES, then it can be sold as a ‘captive-breed’ to avoid any legal wrangles that could arise. 
  • Factors Driving Wildlife Trafficking in India: Key among the drivers behind wildlife and plant trafficking were reasons such as food, medicine, animal collection, pet trade and making fashion products and adornments out of body parts. 

Impact of Wildlife Trade on the Environment

  • Depletion of Natural Inhabitants: Wildlife trade leads to the depletion of natural habitats and populations of native species.
    • Example: In April 2010, the last known Vietnamese Javan rhinoceros. The animal—the final member of the subspecies Rhinoceros sondaicus annamiticus—was killed by poachers. 
  • Spread of Invasive Species: Introduction of invasive species into ecosystems, such as red-eared slider turtles and suckermouth sailfin catfish, due to the pet trade.
  • Emergence of Zoonotic Diseases: Close human-wildlife contact in wet markets and wildlife trade can lead to the emergence of zoonotic diseases such as Ebola, Marburg virus disease, SARS, and COVID-19.

Way Forward

  • Take Actions on Recommendations the 2024 World Wildlife Crime Report: It stresses the importance of using solutions which can be tailored and the potential for ongoing wildlife crime research to assist these efforts by gaining insights into criminal structures, financial incentives and evolving demand patterns of trafficking chains.
    • Criminal justice responses should be modernised, strengthened and harmonised from source to end markets.
    • Strategic Interventions: With thousands of wildlife species affected and a diverse range of distinct markets driving multiple environmental and societal harms, interventions to reduce wildlife trafficking needed to be prioritised and more strategic.
    • Addressing Organised Crime as a Whole: It is required in order to tackle wildlife crime.
  • Check on Corruption & Technology: The 2024 World Wildlife Crime Report also flagged corruption and technology as areas that should be looked into.
    • There is a need to promote the greater utilization of specialized investigative techniques, including communications interception, undercover operations, use of listening and tracking devices, controlled deliveries, etc.
    • Intelligence Collection and Comprehensive Wildlife Datasets: There is a need for better intelligence collection methods and developing frameworks and protocols for secure and timely intelligence sharing.
  • Synergy & Collaboration: Synergy among Indian Coast Guard and Forest/Police/Customs is crucial to counter marine wildlife smuggling.
    • There is a need to urge strong coherence and harmonisation across the trade chain, strong international cooperation and increased investment to build data and analytical capacity at national and international levels in order to close knowledge gaps.
    • Wildlife crime is interconnected and hence, requires a broader strategy to address organized crime as a whole.
  • Addressing Wildlife Crime as Financial Crime: Establish coordination and cooperation between FIU-India, and Forest/Police/Customs/ for sharing financial intelligence related to wildlife trafficking.
    • Use provisions of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) to investigate and curb wildlife crime as a financial crime.

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Conclusion

Overall, a comprehensive and coordinated approach, involving government agencies, law enforcement, civil society, and international partners, is essential to combat wildlife crime effectively. 

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AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD SOON
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Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
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हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध
Quick Revise Now !
UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
Integration of PYQ within the booklet
Designed as per recent trends of Prelims questions
हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध

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