illegal wildlife trade - Over R29 million worth of Rhino horn confiscated at airport!
Photo Cred: On File | Supplied

The initiative aims to create a platform for impact by bringing together private, public and third-sector partners that can work individually and cooperatively to reveal, disrupt and prevent illegal wildlife trafficking.

 

South Africa (9 February 2020) – Valued at around $23-billion, illegal wildlife trade is the fourth most profitable criminal trafficking enterprise worldwide, yet it’s not given the prominence it deserves. But things are changing. In a first-of-its-kind meeting in SA, the financial sector, government and law enforcement met to discuss ways to combat the industrial theft of wildlife.

Understanding the scale of the problem

Illegal killing and trading of wild animals is a global crisis, with species being hunted to extinction for their horns, skins, and teeth. Due to its abundant wildlife, South Africa has become a global hotspot for poaching syndicates, with rhino, lion, elephant, and pangolins the most prolific targets.

However, wildlife crime is a far more destructive and pervasive force than many believe. According to a study by US and UK scientists, quoted by the BBC, at least one in five vertebrate species on Earth are bought and sold on the wildlife market.

These astonishing figures far exceed previous estimates and highlight the extent of the global problem, with illegal wildlife trade (IWT), tracked to diverse regions including the Andes mountain range, Amazon rainforest, sub-Saharan Africa, South-East Asia and Australia.
 
IWT is currently a leading cause of animal extinction, along with loss of habitat due to land development.

A coordinated response to get the upper hand

The world’s best opportunity to combat IWT is to create a community of interested parties that can collaborate to obstruct the movement of illegal wildlife products from source to destination via commercial transport routes and halt the financial flows associated with this illegal trade.

To this end, The Royal Foundation, spearheaded by HRH The Duke of Cambridge, established a Transport Taskforce in 2016 and, more recently, a Financial Taskforce, both operating under the United for Wildlife banner.

“The initiative aims to create a platform for impact by bringing together private, public and third-sector partners that can work individually and cooperatively to reveal, disrupt and prevent illegal wildlife trafficking,” explained United for Wildlife Programme Manager, Rob Campbell.

“Our ambition is to make it impossible to use private-sector infrastructure to facilitate the financing and transportation of IWT products. It is also vital to combine intelligence from the transport and financial sectors to connect, intercept and hopefully bring down the wider criminal network.”

Bringing the right players together to share intelligence

To date, there are 38 signatories to the Financial Taskforce, including three South African banks, namely: Investec, ABSA and Standard Bank. But given the scale of wildlife pillage that happens out of Africa, particularly Southern Africa, there’s an urgent need for more financial institutions to get involved.

At the January 28 meeting – a first of its kind in Africa – facilitated by United for Wildlife, and hosted by Investec, there were several financial institutions which showed interest in becoming signatories, and post the meeting Grobank Ltd, became the latest member.

Frances Craigie, Chief Dir of Enforcement at the Dept of Environmental Affairs commented:  “I’m very excited because we’ve been doing this work for such a long time and when we meet it’s always the same people. What we need are new players, and that’s what we’re seeing with the financial sector getting involved. They’re coming in and saying they’ve got something to add and contribute to what we are doing. We’ve been talking about collaboration for so long, but now we are actually seeing it.”

Gerald Byleveld, Investec’s Group Money Laundering Reporting Officer, explains that they look for numerous red flags when it comes to IWT, including transactions that don’t support a client’s business model, and large cash deposits, especially among clients who own game farms.

Byleveld says that in addition to screening clients against criminal databases to reduce fraud risk, Investec intends to incorporate additional lists that identify poachers and traffickers, such as those from Wildlife Trusts.

However, more can and will be done to embed IWT into the bank’s systems and processes to better detect suspicious activity linked to wildlife crime, and hopefully reduce the knock-on effect it has on the South African economy through its impact on tourism and job creation in the wildlife industry.

“There are opportunities to leverage technology and integrate mixed media into our analysis to potentially associate clients with reports on IWT cases.” Gerald Byleveld, Group Money Laundering Reporting Officer, Investec

China key to UFW taskforce effectiveness

Since their inception, the taskforces have grown from 12 private sector companies to over 150, which represent the global shipping, airline, and financial industries.

Over the last four years, United for Wildlife has also established a global footprint that today includes government bodies, law enforcement and NGOs, and in 2019 secured an important participant in the form of its first Chinese bank.

Wildlife trafficking was also included as a priority by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), which is currently under the Chinese presidency until July 2020.

“Gaining support from China was the final piece in the puzzle for us. The strength of these associations gives United for Wildlife the soft power to lean on other governments to affect change. Adding the Chinese-led FATF to the collaborative efforts already underway within various global industries and sectors should prompt more governments to take action and allocate additional funds and resources to combat the issue,” suggests Campbell.

David Fein, the Vice-Chair of the United for Wildlife Financial Taskforce, says that to date, the taskforce’s efforts have supported over 70 investigations, contributed to 18 trafficker arrests, intercepted 108 shipments and played a key role in disrupting a major international ivory, rhino horn, and heroin syndicate in East Africa.

The United for Wildlife programme also helps to facilitate innovation in the fight against IWT with the use of modern technologies. “For example, Taskforce members are involved in a project at O.R. Tambo International Airport to develop a scanning system that can detect ivory and rhino horn, which would be a first in the world,” reveals Campbell.

“By going after wildlife smugglers, we can also pursue other crimes that are much higher on countries’ national security radar, like terrorism and drug smuggling.” David Fein, Financial Taskforce Vice-Chair

Fein explains that illegal wildlife trade is the so-called ‘soft underbelly’ of transnational crime.

“It operates within the same framework, the same scale and with the same players who commit other transnational organised crime. The risk-benefit ratio for illegal wildlife trafficking has until now favoured the traffickers. That’s a problem, but we also see it as an opportunity because there’s already a lot of intel being captured on the ground, it just needs to be handed up to the right channels.”

“From the meeting, there was a really positive response from banks, conservationists and law enforcement wanting to collaborate. There’s obviously a lot more than still needs to be done, and time isn’t on our side, but progress is being made,” said a clearly upbeat Campbell post the United for Wildlife meeting.


Sources: Rob Campbell (United for Wildlife) | Dr Tim Wittig (Financial Task Force) | Investec’s Gerald Byleveld and Tanya dos Santos
Don’t ever miss the Good Things. Download the Good Things Guy App now on Apple or Google
Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments or follow GoodThingsGuy on Facebook & Twitter to keep up to date with good news as it happens or share your good news with us by clicking here
Click the link below to listen to the Good Things Guy Podcast, with Brent Lindeque – South Africa’s very own Good Things Guy. He’s on a mission to change what the world pays attention to, and he truly believes that there’s good news all around us. In the Good Things Guy podcast, you’ll meet these everyday heroes & hear their incredible stories:
Or watch an episode of Good Things TV below, a show created to offer South Africans balance in a world with what feels like constant bad news. We’re here to remind you that there are still so many good things happening in South Africa & we’ll hopefully leave you feeling a little more proudly South African. 

About the Author

Brent Lindeque is the founder and editor in charge at Good Things Guy.

Recognised as one of the Mail and Guardian’s Top 200 Young South African’s as well as a Primedia LeadSA Hero, Brent is a change maker, thought leader, radio host, foodie, vlogger, writer and all round good guy.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *