Rescued falcons

Published October 16, 2010

THE Punjab Wildlife Department deserves praise for preventing the smuggling of 53 Siberian falcons to Qatar. The officials made their move when they received a tip-off that the falcons were being booked at Islamabad airport and were destined for the Gulf state. Among the recovered birds are those belonging to the Saker falcon species, which is listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The birds come to the Cholistan area every year to winter. The way these majestic birds of prey are treated after they are captured is truly barbaric: their eyes are stitched while they are deprived of sleep in an attempt to tame them. Of course there is a very lucrative reason why unscrupulous people capture falcons and thereafter try to smuggle them out of the country. The birds are allegedly sold to Arab princes and potentates who use them during hunting trips. Observers say the most prized falcons can fetch prices ranging in millions of rupees, while even average birds can sell for hundreds of thousands of rupees. It is tragic that the smuggled falcons are brought back to Pakistan by the sheikhs to hunt down the hapless houbara bustard, which is listed as vulnerable by the IUCN.

The rescue of the falcons once again highlights the issue of the smuggling of threatened species. Observers say that though such smuggling continues, efforts are being made to crack down on it. Wildlife officials in Balochistan claim to have dismantled several traps recently while flooding in Sindh has brought a temporary halt to the trapping of threatened species in the province. The state needs to remain vigilant and continue its efforts to counter the smuggling of animals. Pakistan's fragile biodiversity is under attack due to a range of factors: illegal hunting, poaching and smuggling are just a few of these.

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