African Groups Flay U.S. Proposal On Endangered
Species
Wednesday, November 19, 2003
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Environmental
groups in East Africa are objecting to a U.S. proposal
to ease restrictions on the importation of threatened
or endangered species, The East African reported yesterday,
claiming it will only provide incentive for the hunting
and killing of such animals (John Mbaria, The East
African/allAfrica.com, Nov. 18).
According to the new proposal submitted by the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, the importation of endangered
species into the United States would generate money
for many countries that in return would be able to
promote wildlife conservation programs.
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The
plan would alter the Endangered Species Act, passed by the
U.S. Congress in 1973, which currently prohibits the capture,
import, sale and killing of endangered species without a
permit issued by the U.S. service (CNN.com, Oct. 11).
In a letter to Chris Nolin, the chief of the U.S. agency's
division of conservation and classification, the International
Fund for Animal Welfare's regional director for East Africa
James Isiche said that "the intended policy change
will bring to naught all the efforts and resources that
countries such as Kenya have for so many decades put into
conservation of endangered species. Encouraging trade in
endangered species will only intensify poaching."
According
to The East African, conservationists claim that the U.S.
proposal was submitted because the U.S. hunting lobby, circuses,
zoos and pet traders are pressuring the government to ease
ESA restrictions.
"This
is the most outrageous of all the Bush administration's
sustained attacks on the ESA because it advocates the direct
killing of endangered species and thus targets the 558 species
listed as endangered in foreign countries," said Block
Evans of the U.S. Endangered Species Coalition.
Interested
parties to the ESA, including East African countries, have
until December to submit comments to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service on the new proposal (Mbaria, The East African/allAfrica.com).
Copyright,
National Journal Group, Year 2003.