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Press Statement: 10 April
2000
CITES & COMMERCIAL
MARINE SPECIES
By: Eugene Lapointe
President IWMC-World Conservation Trust
Former Secretary General of CITES (1982-1990)
Competition is good for athletic
endeavors and business. In matters of global conservation of wildlife
and wild habitat, cooperation is the more desirable quality.
The hallmark of the United
Nations, of CITES and of any successful international relationship promoting
the welfare of a diversity of cultures, traditions, and resources is respect.
That respect includes respect for each state’s sovereignty, each culture’s
right to coexist on the earth, each species’ ability to survive and thrive.
CITES is not a better or worse
forum for matters of international conservation of species than can be
achieved by organizations such as the United Nations Food & Agriculture
Organization (FAO) or regional commissions or even the aggregate actions
of individual states. It is, however, an important component in the
worldwide effort to preserve this planet and all its precious resources
for present and future generations.
The adage of avoiding efforts
“to recreate the wheel” certainly applies to the proposals that would inject
CITES oversight of commercially fished marine species such as sharks.
CITES does not operate in a regulatory, administrative, or scientific vacuum.
For that reason, the admonition to have CITES cooperate with and encourage
FAO efforts to conserve such species should be stressed.
Under the FAO International
Plan of Action (IPOA) for Sharks, each nation is strongly urged to “develop,
implement, and monitor national plans of action” addressing the needs of
shark use and conservation. Within the context of implementing its
Shark IPOA as part of its Code of Responsible Fisheries, FAO is on the
correct course.
More and more the future not
only of resource conservation but also of successful resource-based trade
will depend upon the economic benefit brought to people, cultures and nations;
the promotion of social justice; and its compatibility with environmental
care and sustainability.
Achieving this goal will depend
upon cooperation, not controversy; upon science-based management schemes,
not emotional media manipulation campaigns. Anything less will bring
incalculable harm to CITES and to the species of wild fauna and flora it
has pledged to protect. |