India, faced with the problem of a shrinking tiger population, and China, the hotbed of an illegal trade in tiger parts, have always been on opposite sides of the table on the issue. But for the first time, both have come together at the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) at the Hague tomorrow.
A resolution, endorsed by India, China, Nepal and Russia, says that those countries which breed tigers on a commercial scale (a reference to China) “should implement measures to restrict the captive population to a level supportive only to conserving wild tigers.”
In other words, China, which has at least five tiger breeding farms with a total population of 5000 — almost double the number of tigers in the wild — has committed itself to using these farms purely for conservation, not for trade.
By signing the resolution, India is also acknowledging, for the first time, that tiger farms are legitimate as long as they are not detrimental to the wild tiger population.
So far, China has been the black sheep. Trade in tiger parts has been banned for 14 years and this year China was expected to propose that ingredients such as bone and skin — for traditional Chinese medicine — be allowed to be sourced from tigers bred in its farms.
“This would have been disastrous for us. For, Indian tigers would have been laundered under farmed tigers,” Rajesh Gopal, director, Project Tiger, told The Indian Express from the Hague. “The reason is it’s much more lucrative to poach wild tigers than to spend money to breed tigers.”
... contd.