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![]() by Staff Writers Karachi (AFP) Oct 17, 2020
Pakistani authorities said Saturday they had foiled an attempt to smuggle dozens of endangered falcons worth more than one million dollars out of the country. Wildlife traffickers catch falcons in Pakistan's mountainous north, often to sell them for lucrative profits in the Gulf region, where hunting with the birds is a popular sport. Customs officials seized 75 falcons and a houbara bustard at locations around the southern port city of Karachi in what they called an "unprecedented" anti-smuggling operation. "The birds are listed as rare and endangered species and their trade is strictly banned," said senior customs officer Mohammad Saqif Saeed. He did not identify the species of the birds but estimated their value to be around 200 million rupees (over $1 million) on the black market. Authorities have arrested two suspects and plan to release the birds into the wild. The houbara bustard is a desert bird whose meat is prized among Arab sheikhs as an aphrodisiac. Falcons are often used by wealthy hunting parties from the Gulf who travel to Pakistan's southwestern Balochistan province every winter to catch and kill the houbara. An earlier ban on the sport was overturned by Pakistan's top court. Two hundred rare falcons were reportedly exported to Qatar from Pakistan earlier this year on special permission.
![]() ![]() Amanaci, the Jaguar that symbolizes environmental destruction in Brazil wetlands Corumba De Goias, Brazil (AFP) Oct 14, 2020 Amanaci used to roam freely around Brazil's Pantanal region until an outbreak of fires in this paradise of biodiversity left the jaguar with scorched paws. She was found two months ago sheltering in a chicken coop in Pocone in the central-western state of Mato Grosso, trying to flee the fires. Since then Amanaci has become a symbol of the destruction of the planet's largest tropical wetland caused by fires. Suffering from third degree burns to her paws, she is now being treated with stem cel ... read more
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