Wildlife Advocates: Religious Leaders Vital to Endangered Species
NAIROBI —
In an attempt to curb the slaughter of endangered species across
Africa, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and the Alliance of Religions and
Conservation (ARC) have put together a consortium of religious leaders
to confront poachers and people who buy products derived from the
animals they kill.
WWF calls the illegal wildlife trade today’s biggest threat to the
survival of many endangered species. In 2011, the organization reports,
Africa saw the highest rates of animal killings in more than 20 years
and the largest-scale illegal-ivory seizures ever recorded — equivalent
to the tusks of more than 4,000 dead elephants.
In countries that are home to endangered animals such as elephants,
rhinos and tigers, rule of law is often weak, law enforcement spotty,
and corruption rife. WWF and ARC have partnered with Christian, Muslim,
Hindu, Jewish, Buddhist and traditional faith leaders from across Africa
to unite against poachers.
Broad reach, influence
Broad reach, influence
According to the 2007 Atlas of Religion, the faiths reach 85 percent of the world’s 6.79-billion people.
“In every religious community, religious leaders are the people they
turn to for advice, the people who lead their communities through dramas
and traumas and strife and are still there at the end of it," says ARC
Secretary General Martin Palmer, who hopes religious leaders may find
success in teaching followers that poaching destroys God’s creation and
is therefore akin to blasphemy. "Government officials: they disappear;
NGOs pack up and go home when it gets tough. But the religions are of
the people, by the people, for the people. That’s why they’re powerful.”
Imam Kasozi, a Muslim leader from Uganda, uses his influence to warn
followers that spiritual consequences for poaching in the afterlife will
be much stronger than those meted out on Earth.
Killing endangered species, he says, is not only illegal, but immoral.
“We warn and advise people not to kill because of greed," he says. "It
is a criminal offense, and, in front of God, a criminal offense will
send you to the gallows on the Day of Judgment.”
A large-scale enterprise
According to Sam Weru, WWF conservation director in Kenya for eight
years, the greed of which Kasozi speaks is precisely what alarms
activists and conservationists.
“I mean, people are not poaching elephants [or] rhino for food," he
says, emphasizing the scale and complexity of the problem. "They are
hacking the horn and taking off with it, leaving the whole carcass
there.
"Look at the level of investment into poaching," he adds. "It’s the not
the man with the poisoned bows and arrows or a trap. These are
organized gangs that come with automatic weapons. That is not somebody
who is looking for food. That is somebody who is looking for big-time
money.”
In China, Thailand, and Vietnam, where products derived from these
animals is highest, ivory from elephants, considered a sign of wealth
and status, is used for carvings and religious items, while so-called
treatments from rhino horn are thought to cure cancer, remedy hangovers
or work as sexual aphrodisiacs.
Dekila Chungyalpa, director of WWF’s Sacred Earth program, says these concoctions have no medicinal value.
“All of these are myths, because if you look at rhino horn and you
think about the composition of rhino horn, well, that’s horse hooves,"
he says. "Basically, people are eating something similar to horse hoof
and convinced that that’s going to cure their cancer, and there’s a huge
amount of profit that’s coming out of that.”
A need to coexist
ARC's Palmer says that some practitioners of faith, however, are using
the philosophy of traditional Chinese medicine to battle the poachers.
Some Daoists, for example, argue that an imbalance of the cosmic forces
of yin and yang can result in new or continuing illness.
“Because you’ve actually destroyed the delicate balance that God has
created, that medicine’s not going to work," he says. "Not only is it
not going to work, but it might actually be detrimental to you, it might
poison you."
In defense of the endangered species, he says, Daoists are undermining
market forces by challenging the psychology of Chinese traditional
medicine.
"They’re saying, you can spend $100,000 on something that includes a
bit of a tiger and a bit of an elephant and a bit of a rhino, but
because you are responsible for killing those animals, and pushing them
to extinction, that medicine is never going to work.”
Reverend Edward Matuvhulye of Zimbabwe's United Church of Christ says
animals and humans are God’s creatures — a message underscored by all
the faiths.
"They were also created by God as we were created by God," he says,
describing the animals as an important aspect of human life. "Therefore,
there is a need for us to coexist.”
According to a Global Financial Integrity report, the illegal wildlife
trade is the fifth largest illicit transnational activity in the world,
after counterfeiting and the illegal trades in drugs, people, and oil.
It has an estimated value of $7.8 billion to $10 billion per year.
ไม่มีความคิดเห็น:
แสดงความคิดเห็น