MoNRE requests tightened control of wildlife trafficking, consumption

The Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MoNRE) has demanded sectors and localities nationwide to enhance the management of illegal wildlife caging, trading and consumption.
February 19, 2020 | 22:30
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monre requests tightened control of wildlife trafficking consumption

Wild birds sold at a market in the southern province of Long An (Photo: VNA)


The move was made amid complex developments of the 2019 novel coronavirus that causes the acute respiratory disease called COVID-19, which is believed to spread to humans from wild animals.

In its document recently sent to other ministries, ministry-level agencies, Government agencies, and provincial-level People’s Committees, the MoNRE asked them to boost communications to raise public awareness of illegal wildlife hunting, trading, caging and consumption, as well as risks of disease infection posed by the consumption of and contact with wild animals.

It also asked law enforcement bodies like forest protection, market surveillance, customs, border guard and police forces to enhance coordination in restaurant and business examination to prevent wildlife trading in unlicensed markets and strictly deal with violations of relevant regulations.

Besides, ministries, sectors and localities need to instruct wildlife breeding facilities to increase quarantine and sterilisation measures, limit contact with wild animals, and keep in touch with local management agencies to stay updated with disease information, according to the MoNRE.

Meanwhile, many organisations like the World Wide Fund for Nature, Wildlife Conservation Society, Fauna and Flora International, Save Vietnam’s Wildlife and Animals Asia have sent open letters to the Prime Minister of Vietnam to call for the eradication of illegal wildlife trading and consumption.

They pointed out that many epidemics over the last 20 years have connections with virus clusters in wildlife populations.

For example, the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in late 2002 and early 2003 that infected more than 8,000 people in 37 countries and killed 774 of them, came from a new beta-coronavirus strain that hails from bats and is transmitted via the masked palm civet (Paguma larvata).

Meanwhile, the Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) that broke out in 2012, spread to 2,494 people and killed 858 was caused by another coronavirus strain transmitted from camels to humans.

The African swine fever, which recently wreaked havoc on pig farming in China, Vietnam and nine other countries, is believed to come from wild boars in Africa, according to the organisations.

They said the ongoing COVID-19 epidemic will cause considerable impact on Vietnam. Therefore, they called on the Vietnamese Government to take strong and sustainable actions to prevent illegal wildlife trading and consumption to ensure national safety, economic security and public health, as well as to conserve ecosystems./.

VNA