Police nabbed suspected traffickers in
airports, breeding centers, and pet stores across 22 countries.
By Dina Fine Maron National Geographic/UK,
6/5/19
More than 4,000 live reptiles, including six
Kenyan sand boa snakes found in air cargo in the United States, have been
seized as part of Operation Blizzard, a global law enforcement bust targeting
reptile traders.
Global police forces have carried off the
largest reptile trade bust to date, arresting 12 suspects and seizing more than
4,000 live reptiles at airports, breeding facilities, and pet stores across
Europe, North America, and elsewhere throughout April and May.
The initiative, dubbed Operation Blizzard—a
play on words referring to the deluge of activity around lizards—was
coordinated by Interpol and Europol in response to the illegal trade in snakes,
turtles, and other protected reptiles. Trafficking of these animals is
threatening some species with extinction and also fuelling disease outbreaks
among humans.
The exotic reptile trade has exploded in the
past two decades, with millions of the animals now imported—legally and
illegally—into the European Union and United States as household pets. Some
reptiles are also coveted for their skins, made into high-end fashion items
such as shoes, belts, and handbags. (Learn more: The
Exotic pet trade, explained.)
Few protections exist for reptiles: Only about
8
percent of the roughly 10,000 species are included in the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, the
international treaty that regulates the commercial trade of wildlife across
national borders.
As part of Operation Blizzard, law
enforcement agencies in 22 countries—including New Zealand, Italy, Spain, South
Africa, and the U.S.—scoured intelligence reports, cross-referenced earlier
cases, monitored social media, and conducted targeted inspections of breeding
facilities, says Sergio Tirro, a project manager for environmental crime at
Europol who helped collect intelligence for the operation. Sharing intel across
borders allowed them to identify more than 180 suspects.
“This operation clearly demonstrates the
value of international cooperation” says Chris Shepherd, executive director of
Monitor, a nonprofit organisation in British Columbia, Canada, dedicated to
combating illegal wildlife trade. “It also illustrates the scale of this
massive and well-organised trade.”
Six arrests have already been made in Italy and
another six in Spain, with further arrests and prosecutions expected, according
to a statement
from Interpol. In one case, according to Europol, an airline passenger had 75
live turtles in his luggage without any of the required paperwork. (Read more
about the illegal turtle trade.)
“Generally, our main target is a not a single
passenger or individual—our focus is organised crime groups behind the illegal
trade,” Tirro says. Still, many of the individuals identified were small-scale
participants rather than organised crime leaders, he notes, adding that law
enforcement hopes this work will help them build cases against top-tier people
who are coordinating the illegal trade.
The seizures included more than 20 crocodiles
and alligators, six Kenyan sand boa snakes found in air cargo in the U.S., and
150 items made from reptile skins—including handbags, watchstraps, traditional
medicines, and taxidermied products. Although the main focus of the operation
was on reptiles, law enforcement also nabbed other animals and wildlife
products: live owls, falcons, swans, elephant ivory, bushmeat.
Nine reptiles being smuggled from Washington
State into British Columbia were seized in Canada, says Sheldon Jordan, who
heads up the wildlife crime unit of Environment and Climate Change Canada.
Three of those animals had died in transit, underscoring how deadly the illegal
wildlife trade can be, he says. Operation Blizzard was conducted at this time
of year because most reptile trading in the northern hemisphere takes place during
the spring and summer months, when these cold-blooded animals are more likely
to stay warm enough to survive, Jordan says.
Seizing 4,000 reptiles is significant,
Shepherd notes, but “there are millions of reptiles being illegally traded
every year,” and the market for these creatures keeps growing. Dismantling the
well-organised networks that orchestrate the reptile trade and working with the
countries where these animals are stolen from the wild, he says, are essential.
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