AN BINH, Vietnam (AP) — Nineteen tigers prowl outdoor cages the size
of dormitory rooms, nibbling frayed wire fences and roaring at a
caretaker who taunts them with his sandal.
It looks like a zoo,
but it's closed to the public. The facility breeds tigers, but has never
supplied a conservation program with any animals nor sold any to zoos.
Conservationists
allege that Vietnam's 11 registered tiger farms, including this one,
are fronts for a thriving illegal market in tiger parts, highly prized
for purported — if unproven — medicinal qualities.
Nonsense, says
manager Luong Thien Dan. He says the farm in southern Binh Duong
province was created simply because its management has a "soft spot" for
the big cats, and that it's funded privately by a beer company.
"At
first we just kept them as pets, but when they started to breed, we got
excited and wanted to expand their population," Dan said during a tour
of the farm, about 40 kilometers (25 miles) from Ho Chi Minh City.
The
illegal wildlife trade is worth an estimated $8 billion to $10 billion
per year in Southeast Asia alone and includes tigers, rhinos and other
lesser-known animals.
The conservationists say the loosely
regulated farms are used to "launder" illegally caught wild tigers,
which they say are mixed in with stocks of legitimately bred animals,
and that products from their carcasses are later sold on the black
market.
The conservation group WWF this week ranked Vietnam as the
worst country for wildlife crime in its first such survey of how well
23 countries in Asia and Africa protect rhinos, tigers and elephants.
The Switzerland-based group focused its report released Monday on
countries where the threatened animals live in the wild or are traded or
consumed. Vietnam's foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a
written request for comment on the WWF report.
However, the
government has commented on the tiger farms, saying in a 2009 report
that they are aimed at breeding tigers for "future reintroduction
programs." No captive tiger has been successfully introduced to a wild
population anywhere in the world.
Some proponents of wildlife
farms argue that they can ease the pressure on wild populations by
lessening the demand for poached animals.
But in Asia, such farms
are largely unregulated and create "an avenue for trade in something
that you shouldn't be trading in," said Vincent Nijman, a wildlife trade
expert at Oxford Brookes University in England.
Vietnam is now
being accused of becoming a key driver of an illegal trade that spans
continents. Advocacy groups say the government's support for captive
wildlife facilities — especially tiger farms — suggests that although it
professes wildlife conservation, it actually is helping to drive
threatened animals toward extinction.
China, which the
Washington-based Brookings Institution calls the "world's largest market
for illegal trade in wildlife," finished the second worst in WWF's
ranking, but received praise for recent efforts to police the illegal
trade in ivory and tiger products. In 2010, Chinese authorities required
the country's two largest tiger farms to place microchips in live
tigers and keep track of the carcasses of animals that die.
In
neighboring Vietnam, however, the prime minister's decision in 2007 to
legalize tiger breeding farms on a pilot basis has "undermined" the
government's wildlife enforcement efforts, the WWF wildlife crime report
said.
It added that captive tigers now appear to be a
"substantial proportion" of the world's illegal tiger trade. Tiger bone
paste — which some Vietnamese say is an effective pain killer — can
fetch a few hundred dollars per ounce ($1,000 per 100 grams) on the
black market.
The 35-page WWF report comes on the heels of a
controversy in May, when international environmental officials and
wildlife advocates learned that Vietnam's agriculture ministry had
proposed allowing parts of tigers that die in captivity to be made into
traditional medicine on a pilot basis.
An official at the
ministry, Do Quang Tung, denied critics' charges that the proposal was
designed to effectively legalize trade in tiger products, and an
official at Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung's office told the AP earlier
this month that Dung had rejected the proposal.
The global
population of wild tigers has dropped precipitously over the last
century, from about 100,000 to fewer than 3,500. According to the
wildlife advocacy group TRAFFIC, at least 200 tiger carcasses were
seized from the illegal trade worldwide last year. Vietnam is one of 13
countries with wild tigers, but they number less than 50 in Vietnamese
territory, according to government figures.
Wildlife advocates say
Vietnam's tiger farms have high mortality rates and cannot possibly
sustain their reported populations without sourcing smuggled tigers,
which they say often enter the country via its mountainous border with
Laos — a country ranked the third worst offender on WWF's wildlife crime
report.
According to Vietnam's Ministry of Agriculture and Rural
Development, 49 of the 112 tigers living on the 11 registered tiger
farms were born in captivity.
Tiger farm manager Luong Thien Dan
said tigers at his farm typically die after fighting or when mothers
neglect to breastfeed cubs, and that all dead tigers are cremated under
supervision from local authorities.
He told the AP that he
couldn't recall how his farm acquired its first cubs, nor how many
tigers have died since the farm opened.
Dan says the farm covers
expenses — raw meat runs about 150 to 200 million dong ($7,200 to
$9,600) per month — with profits that his cousin, Ngo Duy Tan, earns as a
beer keg manufacturer. The rusty tiger cages sit on Pacific Beer
Company's 7,000 square meter (75,000 square foot) property, across a
parking lot from silver brewing tanks and a giant pile of malt.
Farm
management hopes to open an ecotourism park to showcase its tigers, but
Dan said the farm's future is uncertain because it has only a temporary
permit from the prime minister. Dan said he would welcome a government
move to legalize the selling of tiger parts for use in traditional
medicine.
"It would be good for society and for us," he said. Joyo News
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