- Title: Belgium bans import of hunting trophies from endangered species
- Date: 7th February 2024
- Summary: WARSAW, POLAND (FEBRUARY 7, 2024) (REUTERS) PARLIAMENT SECURITY BLOCKING OPPOSITION POLITICIANS, INCLUDING FORMER INTERIOR MINISTER MARIUSZ KAMINSKI, FROM ENTERING PARLIAMENT BUILDING HAND IN GLOVE / POLITICIANS FROM OPPOSITION LAW AND JUSTICE (PiS) SURROUNDED BY JOURNALISTS AND SECURITY PIS POLITICIANS AND SECURITY PUSHING KAMINSKI AMONG JOURNALISTS (SOUNDBITE) (Polish) P
- Embargoed: 21st February 2024 12:07
- Keywords: Belgium Hunting Trophies ban
- Location: VARIOUS LOCATIONS
- City: VARIOUS LOCATIONS
- Country: Belgium
- Topics: Europe,Lawmaking,Government/Politics
- Reuters ID: LVA004825406022024RP1
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Belgium has banned the import of hunting trophies such as lion claw bottle openers and ashtrays made from elephant feet, a move campaigners hope will be followed by other European countries.
Belgium's parliament voted in late January to ban the imports from a range of rare or threatened animals including alligators, lions, tigers, elephants, rhinoceroses, various turtles, orang-utans, lemurs and northern hairy-nosed wombats.
Belgian Environment Minister Zakia Khattabi told Reuters the Belgian ban was more symbolic than significant in itself because licences could in any case be issued by other EU countries.
The European Parliament called in October 2022 for a ban on the import of trophies derived from species listed by CITES, an international agreement that aims to ensure that trade in wild animals and plants does not threaten their survival.
EU law says an import permit is required for trophies of threatened or rare species, and checks should also be carried out on trophies from a wider range of wild animals.
Ruud Tombrock, executive director at the Humane Society International, an animal protection organisation, said 25,000 animal trophies had been imported into the European Union from 2014 to 2022, of which about 500 were into Belgium.
Tombrock said industry arguments that trophy hunting was essential for the conservation of species and that local communities benefited were wrong. Instead, he said it was often that healthy animals were taken out and the main beneficiaries were foreign nationals organising trips and local elites.
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