ECONOMY-SCIENTIFIC-TECHNOLOGY
                    
                    
                    
                    
                    
                     
                        
                     
                             Illegal bear trade still persists in Vietnam
                              24 November 2016 | 11:39:00 AM 
                             The illegal market for bears and bear parts is still strong in Vietnam despite the introduction of legislation to ban their sale in 2006.
                             
 
Experts from Animals Asia’s Vietnam Bear Rescue Centre in Tam Đảo National Park recently rescued four Asian black bears from two farms in the Central Highlands province of Gia Lai.— Photo baogialai.vn 
 
This revelation stems from the latest research by TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade monitoring network.
 Released yesterday on the sidelines of the Hanoi Conference on Illegal  Wildlife Trade and titled An assessment of the trade in bear bile and  gall bladders in Vietnam, the report analysed data from surveys of shops  in six cities across Vietnam in 2012 and 2016.
The report has provided evidence of a range of bear products still being  put on offer. Of the 70 traditional medicine and other outlets surveyed  in 2016, 40 per cent had bear products for sale, down from 56 per cent  in 2012.
Raw bear bile was the most prominent product that was openly available.  Much of it is reportedly sourced from bear farms in the country. Surveys  showed more traders were aware of the illegality of this trade in 2016,  and the authors suggest this could mean it had been driven underground.
Bear gall bladders are the most expensive product available for sale,  but the number of outlets selling them dropped from 12 in 2012 to only  two in 2016, where neither admitted to storing the product on the  premises. However, the traders claimed it was sourced from wild bears in  Vietnam, Laos PDR, Russia and Thailand. Consumers were said to be  willing to pay more, up to double the price, for wild-sourced, freshly  harvested products.
“Although our study found bear bile farming was unlikely to be  profitable and is in decline in Vietnam, the sale of wild-sourced  products is particularly alarming and highlights the ongoing threat to  bear populations across Asia,” said Lalita Gomez, a project officer with  TRAFFIC and an author of the new report.
The researchers found that the current trade dynamic strongly suggests  bear farming may have increased threats to wild bear populations in  Southeast Asia, creating a network of captive facilities where it is  relatively easy to pass off trapped wild bears as domestic ones.
“TRAFFIC offers full support to the Vietnamese government in developing  an action plan to eliminate all illegal bear farms by 2020 and enforce  legislation on the illegal trade of bear products,” said Madelon  Willemsen, head of TRAFFIC in Vietnam.
“Although the legislation is in place to protect bears, Vietnam needs to ensure it is adequately enforced,” said Willemsen.
In the 1990s, bear bile farms were established throughout Vietnam to  address the increasing consumer demand. Under legislation introduced in  Vietnam in 2006, it became illegal to hunt, transport, keep, advertise,  sell, purchase and consume bear species or their parts and derivatives.
 
                             (VNS)
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