Stuffed in suitcases or strapped
to passengers’ bodies, more and more rare species are finding their way on to
the black market. But a radical new wave of wildlife detectives is on the
case.
By
Rowan Moore Gerety, 2/2/18
In February 2016, Richard Lewis,
a wildlife conservationist working in Madagascar, was
contacted by a veterinary clinic with an unusual request. “Someone went to a
vet and said: ‘Can you take a microchip out of a ploughshare?’” Lewis recalled.
“So they called us.”
The ploughshare
tortoise is one of the rarest tortoises on the planet: with fewer than
50 adults thought to be left in the wild, each one is worth as much as $50,000
on the global exotic pet market. Like gold or ivory, their very rarity is part
of what drives smugglers’ interest. Lewis runs the Madagascar programme of the
Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, which operates a captive breeding site
where ploughshares are reared for more than a decade before being released into
the wild. Both buying and selling ploughshares, or keeping them as pets, is
illegal, and the breeding site is heavily defended, with barbed wire and
round-the-clock armed security. As a further measure against smuggling, the
organisation implants every ploughshare it encounters with a microchip. Anyone
hoping to remove the microchip is likely to be involved with tortoise
trafficking.
The Durrell Trust’s staff vet met
with the man a few days later. It turned out that he had five ploughshares in
total. As soon as the vet told him that what he was doing was illegal, he
disappeared. But the very next day, alerted by staff at Durrell, an off-duty
police officer was on hand at another clinic when the man tried once again to
have the microchip removed.
For Lewis, what happened next was
deeply dispiriting. “The person was arrested, went to court, was found guilty,
and given a fine of 15,000 ariary ($5)” said Lewis. “I remember the minister
[of the environment] saying ‘This is ridiculous’,” Lewis said. “This is
somebody en flagrant délit – caught in the act – and gets a couple of dollars’
fine. Something’s wrong somewhere.”
Tortoise populations in
Madagascar have plummeted in recent years. Another species, the radiated
tortoise, was once one of the most common animals in the spiny forests
of southern Madagascar. “When you talk to people about visiting the south 20
years ago,” said Lewis, you hear them say “‘You couldn’t drive down the road
without stopping to avoid squashing tortoises – they were everywhere.’”
Yet in the past five years,
according to the herpetologist Ryan Walker, the number of radiated tortoises in
Madagascar has dropped by more than half, from roughly 6.5m to 3m. “We worked
out that about a half a million tortoises are being taken every year,” Walker
said. “That gives you an idea of the scale of the problem.”
Behind this population crash lies
a mixture of political and environmental factors. In 2009, a military-backed
coup
and protracted political crisis followed a deep drought. Another drought
followed from 2013 and 2016, pushing hundreds of thousands of people to the
edge of famine. As farming failed, people turned to the bushmeat trade in large
numbers. In the poorest corner of one of the poorest countries on the planet,
it didn’t take much for poachers to find men willing to climb on board an open
truck and pick an area clean of radiated tortoises in the space of a few hours.
As poaching of radiated tortoises
reached an industrial scale across southern Madagascar, smugglers in the
north-west zoomed in on Baie de Baly National Park, the only place in the world
to find ploughshares. “What we witnessed, starting at the end of 2015, and into
2016, was an exponential increase in tortoise poaching,” Lewis said. “It just
went off the scale. We’d never seen anything like it. It was almost as if
everybody was trying it on,” Lewis said. In one case, a family on their way to
China gave a bag of ploughshares to a police officer to spirit through airport
security for them, whereupon the bag split and the tortoises spilled out on to
the floor in front of the other passengers at the gate. At the end of 2015, the
Durrell Trust was forced to stop releasing captive-bred tortoises into the wild
out of fear that they would be poached.
Smuggling of rare frogs is also a
problem in Madagascar. Photograph: Miguel Vences/TU Brunswick Handout/EPA
The problem goes well beyond
tortoises. Some four of every five animal species in Madagascar are unique to
the island, and many are critically endangered – which only makes them more
valuable to criminals looking to sell them abroad. At Ivato international
airport, the country’s main port of entry, customs agents have discovered
trunks full of chameleons packed in takeaway food containers, and little
plastic souvenir boxes containing solitary frogs. (The chief customs collector
at Ivato airport, Haja Rakotoarimalala, has led recent efforts to crack down on
customs officers who abet trafficking. “There are lots of public servants
involved,” he said. “Otherwise, it couldn’t work.”)
In a country where corruption is
rife, laws protecting wildlife can be little more than theoretical. All exports
of Malagasy
rosewood, for instance, have been prohibited since early 2010 – but
some of Madagascar’s loggers and exporters also hold seats in parliament.
Enforcing the ban is a different matter.
Madagascar is consistently near
the bottom of Transparency International’s corruption
perceptions index, a global survey of public corruption. If you ask
the locals, they will tell you it’s a place where everything has a price, from
passports to university admissions to jobs in the civil service – and, of
course, the favour of powerful officials. Over the course of 2016, the agency
that investigates public corruption in Madagascar demanded the arrest of more
than 150 people on corruption charges; as a result of political pressure, fewer
than 20% were actually detained.
“The example comes from on high,”
said Ndranto Razakamanarina, who chairs a coalition of environmental advocacy
groups known as AVG, based in Madagascar’s capital city, Antananarivo. “If
people see that they’re doing it at the top,” he said, “everybody else will
follow suit.”
As the underground trade in
tortoises exploded, Lewis and his colleagues at Durrell resolved to find a way
to fight back. Their first target was a person who appeared to be selling
ploughshare tortoises on Facebook. The day before Christmas 2015, someone with
the username “Atsila Ratsila” had posted a photo of six adult ploughshares
huddled together on a parquet floor. Several of the animals, Lewis observed,
bore engravings on their shells that confirmed that they were, in his words,
“our animals” – reared in captivity and stolen from the wild.
Lewis and his team hired a former
police officer, who had spent a decade working on counter-terrorism, corruption
and organised crime, to investigate. Within a few weeks, through his
connections in law enforcement and by piecing together the user’s social media
activity, he had identified the suspect.
Andriamanalintseheno Tsilavina
Ranaivoarivelo, alias Atsila Ratsila, was an unemployed 27-year-old from a
small market town south of the capital, with a business degree that he had
earned online. Ratsila also appeared to have extensive contacts in south-east
Asia. Banking records showed that he had received money transfers from
Thailand, where many of Madagascar’s smuggled tortoises end up as pets.
But Durrell is a wildlife
conservation organisation with no powers of enforcement: there was only so much
they could do on their own. It was around this time that Razakamanarina, the
environmental campaigner with AVG, suggested joining forces with a group called
Eco Activists for Governance and Law Enforcement, or Eagle.
Eagle specialises in building
cases against poachers and traffickers in places where wildlife laws otherwise
go largely unenforced. The group aims to develop cases so airtight that there
is no room for corruption to undermine the process. The strategy, first
developed in Cameroon in 2003, involves supporting the entire chain of people
needed to bring a successful prosecution – from potential informants who see
something suspicious, all the way to the wardens responsible for making sure
prisoners actually serve out their sentences.
A ploughshare tortoise being
marked to deter smugglers. Photograph: Tim Flach
Eagle’s approach was developed by
Ofir
Drori, an Israeli army veteran and former freelance journalist with
a keen appreciation of military discipline and the importance of media
exposure. Whether the target is the ivory trade, or the trafficking of great
apes or amphibians, Eagle trains up local NGOs who agree to follow the group’s
operations manual, and to meet its benchmarks: one trafficking arrest a week,
and a news story on wildlife crime every single day.
Rather than relying on testimony
or circumstantial evidence – which could be disputed or thrown out on a pretext
– Eagle’s standard is to conduct video-recorded stings that produce
incontrovertible evidence of wrongdoing. Cameroon passed its most important
wildlife law in 1994. Ten years later, a top forestry official observed, the
baseline was still “almost no prosecutions” of wildlife crime. Eagle’s approach
resulted in the successful convictions of 500 wildlife traffickers between 2006
and 2013. Funding from the US Fish and Wildlife Service
gradually allowed Eagle to expand into eight more countries in Africa. In
Madagascar, Eagle’s partnership with AVG was given the name Project Alarm.
Ratsila’s Facebook page – with
photos taken in a Bangkok airport and friends whose avatars were tortoises,
chameleons and snakes – hinted that he might be part of a wider wildlife
smuggling network.
Razakamanarina first met a
representative from Eagle in February 2016, and asked for their help in
tracking the people connected to the Facebook account. The task of setting up a
deal with Ratsila in person was given to a Dutch volunteer based in Madagascar,
who had connected with Eagle while backpacking through Africa. The
volunteer (who agreed to speak to me on condition of anonymity) told me that,
as a rule, foreigners have an easier time putting on a convincing act as
would-be buyers: smugglers have less cultural context to judge their behaviour
undercover, and they fit the profile of someone with the resources to engage in
international smuggling.
Ratsila proved an easy mark. He
was unguarded: back in early 2016, being caught and punished for smuggling
tortoises was unheard of. The most noteworthy prison sentences related to
Madagascar’s flora and fauna in recent years had gone not to rosewood
traffickers, who had exported hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of
illegally harvested timber, but to the environmental activists who had
denounced them. Just a few months earlier, Razakamanarina had been summoned to
police headquarters in Antananarivo and accused of defamation for giving a
press conference in which he suggested that politicians were involved in
rosewood trafficking. (Charges against him were never filed.)
In September 2016, the undercover
buyer arranged to meet Ratsila at a swanky bistro in a renovated colonial train
terminal in Antananarivo. He and a silent companion joined the buyer at a table
outside, far from other diners. Ratsila, who was slight, with a paunch and a
pockmarked face, seemed uncomfortable at first, sitting down without ordering
anything to drink. He spoke limited English and avoided eye contact, but he
agreed to meet again the following week to show his merchandise.
A few days later, the buyer went
to an address near Ivato airport. Ratsila opened the door to a villa that was
empty except for seven large suitcases, each overflowing with radiated
tortoises. The buyer took photos to send to his supposed boss. They agreed on a
price of $250 a head for 200 tortoises – a total of $50,000 – and set a
rendezvous location for the next morning.
Vague arrangements for the sting
had been worked out ahead of time, but, following Eagle’s protocol, the
specifics were withheld from law enforcement until the last possible moment.
That way, they could minimise the risk that sensitive information would leak to
anyone who might sabotage the group’s efforts. The police only learned of the
timing and location of the operation at 8am on the appointed day, over a cup of
coffee at a nearby hotel.
A trio of representatives from
AVG and Eagle showed the police officers how the raid was going to unfold and
what their roles would be, using a hand-drawn floorplan for the hotel where the
arrest would take place. The vagaries of public funding being what they are in
Madagascar, it was up to AVG to make sure the officers had petrol in their
vehicles, and enough phone credit to communicate with one another leading up to
the sting.
At 8am, the man posing as a buyer
left AVG’s offices. He had an hour to get to his meeting with Ratsila, but
traffic was at a standstill. Antananarivo is a warren of steep hills and narrow
streets that are constantly clogged with tiny pale yellow Renault taxis and, as
you move further from the centre, the occasional herd of oxen. That morning it
quickly became clear that crawling along in a taxi would mean missing the
appointment. The buyer would have to go on foot.
A pair of AVG’s investigators
trailed Ratsila’s car to the rendezvous point, updating the rest of the team on
his progress via WhatsApp. At the Hotel Radama, where the buyer claimed to be
staying, Ratsila unloaded three large suitcases and followed the buyer to a
room on the second floor. A few minutes later, five plainclothes officers burst
through the door with guns drawn, while a lawyer working with AVG followed
behind, filming the raid on a mobile phone. In the footage, you can make out
muffled cries of “What the fuck!” from the fake buyer, as three officers
struggle to pin him behind the door. Ratsila submitted far more quietly, face
down on the bed with a knee on his back.
A suitcase full of smuggled
tortoises seized in a raid in Madagascar. Photograph: Courtesy of Alliance
Voahary Gasy (AVG)
Ratsila’s suitcases, full of
radiated tortoises, were unzipped on the floor. A few tortoises, piled high on
top of one another, poked their heads out of their shells to look around, or
waved their limbs, trying for a foothold. The whole thing was over within
minutes. Ratsila was taken into custody, and AVG had video footage of 198
radiated tortoises (two short of the agreed amount) crammed into suitcases.
The tortoises were quickly
delivered to the Turtle Survival Alliance, a group that maintains a safehouse
of sorts in the capital, where captured animals are checked by vets and
quarantined before being flown to the southern end of the island to be released
into the wild.
Ratsila and the undercover buyer
were taken in handcuffs to the nearest police station. On the way, Ratsila
offered the police officers $6,000 in exchange for his freedom. “Not to worry,”
Ratsila told the undercover buyer. “I have friends at the presidency.” If the
buyer could put up the cash, he said, he could call someone at the presidential
palace – just a block away, as it happened – to help secure their release.
For Lewis, the arrest was
bittersweet. It looked as though the six ploughshares from the Facebook photo
that sparked the investigation had long since been sold overseas. Still, they
had their man.
A week after Ratsila’s arrest,
halfway across the country, a forestry official riding in a crowded jitney near
the port city of Vohémar noticed an odd smell that seemed to be coming from a
fellow passenger’s baggage and got in touch with the police. When the vehicle
was stopped on arrival in the city, officers discovered a bag of 56 grilled
lemurs destined to become secret off-menu delicacies at exclusive hotels along
the coast.
The lemurs were believed to come
from Loky Manambato, a protected area farther north, famous as home to the
world’s last remaining population golden-crowned
sifakas, an extremely rare species of lemur. Malagasy law prohibits
all lemur trapping and hunting, and even keeping them as pets. The law calls
for a penalty of up to five years in prison, but another lemur poaching case
two months earlier had ended with a fine. In this case, prosecutors requested a
sentence of eight months. More than a year later, the suspect is languishing in
jail, but the case hasn’t been decided. If the usual problem is a verdict that
yields no punishment, punishment without a verdict is hardly a solution.
Tombotsoa Raharijaona, a lawyer
for AVG, explained why judges often use their discretion to let smugglers off
easy. “When you read the law, people don’t understand why you should punish
someone just for a little tortoise,” he said. The courts seldom seem to see wildlife
crime for what it is – a robbery from Madagascar, a crime against future
generations. “It’s a matter of fostering a different culture in the justice
system,” he said hopefully.
Soft-spoken and earnest,
Raharijaona works out of a small home office a few blocks from Madagascar’s
supreme court. Before working on environmental issues, he spent five years as a
legal advisor to an organisation that combats child slavery and human
trafficking. “There’s no equity,” he said. “You see, there are cases here in
Madagascar where a man steals a chicken and gets sentenced to four months.” In
other cases, meanwhile, people who are caught red-handed with endangered
species are released on bail and disappear. Once they have vanished, the cases
against them wither away. “How can it be that we give them temporary freedom
when their guilt was never in doubt?” asked Raharijaona.
The case against Ratsila was as
solid as a prosecutor could hope for. After his arrest, which had been filmed,
Ratsila had given a signed confession to officers specially trained in wildlife
crime, working with the environment ministry. Photographs on his mobile phone
appeared to show how Ratsila had hidden small tortoises inside big boxes of
cookies before sending them to Asia via DHL. Within the previous year he had
made trips to Hong Kong, China and Thailand. There were even Facebook messages
in which he explained to a customer that he sometimes hid the tortoises inside
pairs of socks in his luggage. Finally, there was the trail of money: nearly $5,000
in advance payments via Western Union, all coming from Thailand, and all within
a few weeks.
A ploughshare tortoise.
Photograph: DEA/ C. Dani/ I. Jeske/De Agostini/Getty Images
As we left Raharijaona’s
apartment and walked downstairs, I glanced towards a small patio outside his
neighbour’s front door. There on the ground were the unmistakable,
sunburst-like shells of two radiated tortoises being kept as pets, nibbling on
shards of wilted lettuce. Raharijaona made a grimace and shrugged. “You see,”
he said, “that’s not allowed either.”
The trial of Ratsila and five
accomplices was held in November 2016, and the verdict came just six weeks
after the sting. Five men were each sentenced to two-and-a-half years in
prison, along with fines totalling $60,000. The sixth, the caretaker of the
villa where Ratsila had shown off his wares, was sentenced to 10 months.
But it was not long before the
backsliding began. A few days before Christmas, barely a month into Ratsila’s
30-month sentence, an appeals court granted him bail. It proved impossible to
get an answer from the justice ministry as to why, but to the lawyers at AVG it
seemed likely Ratsila had finally secured an intervention from well-placed
friends, just as he had promised the undercover buyer after their arrest. AVG
held a press conference to try and stir up some unfavourable headlines.
Razakamanarina called the justice minister himself, to no avail. The team had
no choice but to move on to their next case.
There is perhaps no better sign
of the difficulties facing wildlife protection in Madagascar than the fact that
even a successful project can quickly fall apart. Although AVG’s partnership
with Eagle was highly effective – putting more than a dozen convicted tortoise
traffickers in prison, sometimes over the objections of high-ranking
politicians who intervened on their behalf – it lasted only nine months.
From the start, there had been
tension between law enforcement on the one hand, and AVG and Eagle on the
other. During one sting, a police officer with the environment ministry refused
to allow AVG and Eagle staff to attend a search of a suspect’s house after the
arrest. AVG investigators deferred to the policeman’s role as an agent of the
government. But Eagle’s representative insisted that they be allowed to follow
along on the search, and they were. Afterwards, the police officer complained
to a prosecutor, who summoned AVG lawyers to her office to tell them “what we
can and cannot do”.
But the conflict that ultimately
led to the end of Project Alarm was between AVG and Eagle. Over time, staff at
AVG began to chafe at Eagle’s requirement that one of its representatives be
present at every stage of an investigation. “Eagle accused me of lying, said I
encouraged the team not to follow Eagle’s guidance,” said Joély Razakarivony,
AVG’s coordinator for the programme at the time, who soon left in frustration.
“To work with someone who doesn’t trust you? It doesn’t make sense.”
Luc Mathot, an activist with
Eagle who helped set up the program, told me via email: “We were not satisfied
by [AVG’s] respect of our methodology.” Mathot took issue with AVG’s
accounting, alleging that money from Project Alarm had been diverted to pay
other salary costs. Razakamanarina admitted making changes without Eagle’s
approval, but insisted it was justified, and offered to repay the difference.
Still, the damage had been done. Eagle suspended the project in May.
It didn’t take long for the
positive results of AVG and Eagle’s collaboration to unravel. Two months later,
Annie Rajeriarison, a lawyer who had worked for Project Alarm, took me to
Antanimora prison, a hilltop penitentiary where conditions are so bad that
prisoners suffer from malnutrition and even periodic outbreaks of bubonic
plague. Rajeriarison had got to know the place well on recent visits,
occasionally gleaning useful tidbits for ongoing investigations when she
brought inmates blankets and medicine. But when I visited on 2 August, only two
of the 20-odd smugglers caught under Project Alarm were still there. Even the
pair that remained – young men who had been found with tortoises taped to their
bodies as they boarded a plane to China – were protesting their innocence.
Their lawyer, they assured me, had told them they would be out soon.
Western donors have spent almost
$1bn on conservation projects in Madagascar since 1990. Project Alarm was a
relative bargain: less than $100,000 all told, to compile a string of
convictions unmatched in the history of fighting poaching in Madagascar. Over
the autumn, AVG aimed to show to potential donors that they were capable of
replicating Project Alarm’s successes without support from a foreign NGO like
Eagle. In October, the group broke up a trafficking ring in Mahajanga, a city
near the national park where ploughshares make their home.
Now, Mamy Rastefano, the
investigator coordinating AVG’s ongoing detective work, has his sights set on
bigger quarry: a “kingpin”, he said, rather than footsoldiers. Through Project
Alarm, AVG had gleaned evidence that seemed to tie the traffickers to far more
powerful people: generals, judges, and leaders of Madagascar’s national
assembly. “For the time being, we haven’t been able to unmask the people who
call the shots,” Rastefano said. “If we can manage to catch just one
high-ranking trafficker – like a minister or a deputy [in parliament] – I can
tell you, it will make the others think twice.”
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