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Mexico
Bans Imports and Exports of Primates and Marine Mammals
MEXICO CITY, MEXICO. - IFAW (International Fund for Animal Welfare) announced
that Mexico has banned the importation and exportation of primates and
marine mammals. The decree by the Government of Mexico protects animals
and confronts the powerful interests that traffic and exploit these species
for profit.
"It is an historic victory for endangered primates and marine mammals,
for environmental groups and for the general public," said Beatriz
Bugeda, Director of IFAW Latin America. "This decision is critical
to conservation
policy in Mexico, which was seriously eroded by environmental authorities
in recent years."
In 2003, the Department of the Environment and Natural Resources (SEMARNAT)
illegally authorized the importation of 28 dolphins from the Solomon Islands
to Mexican-based commercial dolphinariums. IFAW carried out an in-depth
investigation of the facts and filed several complaints to the corresponding
authorities. Biologist Diego Cobo Terrazas, then President of the Environmental
Commission of the Chamber of Representatives, also criticized the decision
and presented a bill to prohibit importation and exportation of primates
and marine mammals - such as whales, dolphins, porpoises, sea lions, seals
and manatees.
On January 26, 2006, the Decree, which modified the General Wildlife Act,
was published in the Official Journal of the Federation and officially
prohibited the ".Importing, exporting and re-exporting specimens
of any species of marine mammal and primate, as well as parts or products
made from them." The law made an exception for animals authorized
by the federal government for scientific research. A portion of the law
banned products
derived from marine mammals, such as pelts and decorations. This becomes
a key tool for IFAW in its historic campaign to abolish Canada's commercial
seal hunt.
"Mexico has officially condemned Canada's cruel slaughter practiced
within the territory of one of its partners in the North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and in this context, placing a ban on importing
marine mammal products is a strategic step," Ms Bugeda said.
In recent years, the Mexican industry of trading and exhibiting marine
mammals has grown considerably. Animals used by the industry, like dolphins,
are captured without control in the waters of countries such as Cuba,
the Solomon Islands and, more recently, Japan.
Dr. Yolanda Alaníz, Director of the organization for the Conservation
of Marine Mammals in Mexico (COMARINO), said, "Capturing cetaceans
for exhibition presents a serious threat not only to the welfare of the
animals themselves, but also to the conservation of the populations from
which = they are taken."
The ban on capturing marine mammals in Mexican waters was decreed in 2002.
That decree also enlarged the polygon of protection for the porpoises
known as Vaquita marina. Added to these new reforms, the new laws all
contribute to strengthen the legal framework in Mexico to protect animals.
IFAW offers special recognition to the efforts made by Biologist Cobo
Terrazas and COMARINO.
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