VietNamNet Bridge – Vietnam has got a red card for a lot of shortcomings in the wildlife protection. Despite a sufficient legal framework on the issue, wild animals still have been hunted and killed to get extinct.

In the WWF’s report about the implementation of CITES (the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species), Vietnam appeared as one of the
nations that have the most worrying results in their efforts to protect the
wildlife.
The information has made scientists and conservationists once again voice their
worries about the wildlife protection in Vietnam, saying that loopholes of the
laws have been exploited to kill wild animals for profit.
The laws encourage poaching?
Not feeling too pessimistic about the warning given by WWF. Professor Dang Huy
Huynh, Chair of the Vietnam Animal Association has affirmed that Vietnam has
made a big leap in the protection of wild animals with many wildlife
conservation programs and the issued legal documents.
Huynh said Vietnam falls behind other countries in the program to protect
wildlife; therefore, shortcomings prove to be unavoidable. However, this does
not mean that Vietnam can continue committing errors. Vietnam needs to take
actions to protect wildlife and prevent the story with Javan rhinos from
occurring with other species.
Also according to Professor Dang Huy Huynh, there are two legal documents that
raise biggest worries to scientists and conservationists, which are the Decree
No. 32 dated in 2006 on the endangered flora and fauna protection, and the
Circular No. 90 of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development on how to
deal with the rare and precious rare animals seized from smuggling cases.
The Article No. 9 of the Decree 32 allows trading and processing for commercial
purpose the forest endangered rare and precious animals, listed in the II B
Group, which are the seized exhibits in illegal trading cases, provided that the
animals cannot be rescued or rehabilitated.
Huynh said that the legal provisions are inconsistent. The current laws prohibit
to trade and hunt for wild animals, while the legal document allows processing
and trading wild animals in the above said some cases.
The circular No. 90 allows selling and transferring dead animals to pharmacy
companies or selling alive animals to legal animal breeding establishments. This
is really a big loophole in the laws, because in the products would turn into
drugs to be sold on the market.
Meanwhile, it’s still unclear about the functions of wild animals as drugs.
Therefore, once Vietnam allows making medicine from wild animals, it would by
accident encourage the killing and trade of wild animals.
Violations legalized
Nguyen Viet Hung, Deputy Director of ENV (Education for Nature Vietnam), a
non-government organization in Vietnam, said that the current regulations allow
trading dead animals, but do not clearly stipulate exactly the situations of the
dead animals.
Hung emphasized that this is loophole of the laws which has been exploited to
continue with live wild animals. In many cases, after the animals were salvaged,
they got weaker when they were carried to the temporary accommodations because
of the habitat differences.
According to ENV, most of the wild animal auctions were organized just one or
two days after the wild animals were discovered and seized. Some auctions were
even organized at bight. Pangolin was one of the species available at most of
the auctions. Management agencies say the buyers were the pangolin farms.
However, ENV has pointed out that in many cases, the farms trade wild animals
for profits. They attended local bids and then sold wild animals on the market.
In fact, it is not profitable to raise pangolin, because the animals cannot grow
in the captivity conditions.
Compiled by Thu Uyen