Vietnam has become the biggest hub in the world for trafficking in horns and other body parts of the rhinoceros, a critically endangered species that is being killed by poachers in South Africa at the rate of one every eight hours.
An estimated 1,300 rhinos are slaughtered for their horns across Africa annually – up from just 100 in 2008 – with the bulk of rhino horn smuggled by criminal gangs into Vietnam, according to surveys by international wildlife trade experts.
We haven’t seen any enforcement actions for markets in Vietnam
Yet Vietnam hasn’t launched a single successful high-level prosecution against illegal rhino horn traders.
The standing committee of CITES, the Convention on Trade in Endangered Species, meeting this week in South Africa, has warned Vietnam that the body will not tolerate the country’s failure to enforce bans on the rhino horn trade.
The warning suggests that possible trade sanctions could be in the offing as early as next year.
CITES is responsible for regulating trade in endangered species, including bans where appropriate, but depends on member states to enforce the ban.