USAID Missions in Africa and Asia Launch New Proposal to Stop Wildlife Trafficking

New agreement to combat illegal wildlife trade between Asia and Africa

For Immediate Release

Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Doreen Robinson
+27 12 452 2000; drobinson@usaid.gov

PRETORIA/BANGKOK -- Last week, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) signed a new agreement to combat illegal wildlife trade between Asia and Africa with the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).  The three-year, $1.5 million
Wildlife Trafficking Response, Assessment and Priority Setting (Wildlife TRAPS) Program will protect wildlife through strengthening the knowledge base and cooperation of governments, inter-governmental organizations, the private sector, and non-governmental organizations to tackle illegal wildlife trade (trafficking) between the two continents. Poaching of elephants and rhinos is at destructively high record levels in Africa, with the ivory and rhino horns destined for Asia. The criminal networks behind the smuggling have been linked to human trafficking, arms and narcotics networks.

Wildlife TRAPS will build on existing USAID efforts as well as ongoing work by the U.S. Department of State and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to help governments in Africa and Asia effectively address emerging wildlife trafficking threats.

"Wildlife TRAPS demonstrates the United States' growing commitment to confront this trans-continental challenge, which impacts not only the survival of the world's treasured wildlife, but the governance systems and tourism-based economies of many developing nations around the globe that depend on these precious natural resources for sustainable economic growth," said USAID/Asia Regional Mission Director, Michael Yates.

Wildlife TRAPS represents a unified approach by USAID in Washington, D.C. and its regional offices in Pretoria, South Africa and Bangkok, Thailand. The announcement of the program was made in Bangkok at a recent reception hosted by U.S. Ambassador to Thailand, Kristie Kenney,
honoring partners working on wildlife trafficking issues, and where world governments are currently attending the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) Sixteenth Conference of the Parties.

The outcomes of negotiations at this conference will determine the fate of some of the world's most precious and highly traded wildlife, including fish and timber species.