Stop International Wildlife Trade

The international wildlife trade is fuelling a public health crisis.

We’re calling on the United Nations, as well as G20 leaders to stop the global wildlife trade by banning both the export and import of wild animals as well as the farming and use of wild animal products for any domestic or medicinal purpose. 

  • The international wildlife trade is a lucrative business, largely fuelled by criminal elements.
  • The trade exploits wild animals for food, pelts, ornaments, jewelry, and traditional medicine.
  • Large tracts of pristine habitat are cleared across the globe to make it easier to capture these animals
  • Those animals are then transported in inhumane, cramped conditions, often across the globe by unskilled, uncaring and unscrupulous operators.
  • We now also know that the trade poses an enormous risk to population health with the World Health Organisation estimating that 60% of all viruses that infect humans come from animals.
  • We must urgently stop this illegal and immoral international wildlife trade.

Will you sign?

 

To the United Nations and G20 Leaders,

Urgently stop the international wildlife trade by banning both the export and import of wild animals as well as the farming and use of wild animal products for any domestic or medicinal purpose. 

Background

The coronavirus pandemic has shone a light on the harsh reality of wildlife markets in China and around the globe. Yet those markets represent just a tiny slice of the international trade in wild animals.

In China alone, wildlife trade is worth more than $73 billion and employs more than one million people. The value of the illegal global trade is estimated by the UN to be around $23 billion.

Meanwhile, the World Health Organisation estimates that 60% of all viruses that infect humans come from animals. This phenomenon is termed ‘zoonosis’. WHO says that 75% of new infections and diseases in the past decade are zoonotic.

We know that to stop these new diseases from emerging, we must put a stop to the international trade in wild animals, a trade that spans most continents and is highly lucrative.

There’s no doubt this wildlife trade is immoral. We already know about the issues around conservation and the ongoing destruction of habitat that takes place to make capturing these animals easier. We know about the gross instances of neglect and the inhumane treatment of these animals as they’re shipped across the globe in close quarters by untrained and uncaring criminals. And now, on the back of a new coronavirus, we know of the huge risk that the trade poses to human health.

That’s why we must act now to stop the illegal and immoral trade in wildlife that is happening, even in the midst of a pandemic, right across the globe. We demand that G20 leaders, along with the United Nations intervene at the highest level to put a stop to both exports and imports that exploit wild animals, causing irreparable damage to sensitive ecosystems as well as public health.

Yours faithfully

1,323 signatures
  • Lyndal Foley
    signed 2020-04-26 21:13:20 +1000
    Lyndal Foley
  • Sherrie Yeomans
    signed 2020-04-26 18:58:47 +1000
    Sherrie Yeomans
  • Kate Flick
    signed 2020-04-26 18:35:10 +1000
    Kate Flick
  • Jane Adams
    signed 2020-04-26 18:06:05 +1000
  • Nina Fitzgerald
    signed 2020-04-26 17:53:49 +1000
  • David Berg
    signed 2020-04-26 16:40:09 +1000
    David Berg
  • Glo Pullen
    signed 2020-04-26 16:16:06 +1000
  • Carolyn Whitehouse
    signed 2020-04-26 15:59:40 +1000
  • Ashleigh Harland
    signed 2020-04-26 15:55:20 +1000
  • Vicki Lennon
    signed 2020-04-24 21:07:06 +1000
  • Noni Green
    signed 2020-04-24 17:18:10 +1000
  • Andrew Simmons
    signed 2020-04-23 02:03:36 +1000
    Recklessly slaughtering and Eating wildlife is both harmful to native fauna as well as a disease spreading mechanism
  • Mel McHugh
    signed 2020-04-22 23:25:58 +1000
  • Tom McGee
    signed 2020-04-22 19:47:31 +1000
  • Janine Clayfield-Hoskin
    signed 2020-04-22 19:20:03 +1000
  • Susan Gallagher
    signed 2020-04-22 15:44:53 +1000
  • Lisa Cameron
    signed 2020-04-22 12:46:30 +1000
  • Kate Robson
    signed 2020-04-22 10:49:31 +1000
  • Jenny Higgins
    signed 2020-04-22 10:40:47 +1000
  • Louise Martin
    signed 2020-04-22 10:01:45 +1000
  • Jennifer Rich
    signed 2020-04-22 09:09:57 +1000
  • marilyn carter
    signed 2020-04-22 08:34:32 +1000
  • Lee Chilman
    signed 2020-04-22 08:19:03 +1000
    I realise accessing protein is difficult for some Chinese, but as proven with this virus, cross contamination is a huge problem, killing wild animals and eating them has to stop, it’s a responsibility of the Chinese government to halt this practice and help the people with alternatives.
  • Suzanne Grainger
    signed 2020-04-22 08:09:46 +1000
    For goodness sake – as much

    money would be made from eco-tourism for the enjoyment and wonder of these animals alive rather than dead.
  • Arlene Henley
    signed 2020-04-22 08:03:13 +1000
  • Dian Eds
    signed 2020-04-21 20:09:51 +1000
    End wildlife trade and wet markets forever. They are only for the greedy.
  • A. Booth
    signed 2020-04-21 14:28:25 +1000
  • Judith Peters
    signed 2020-04-21 13:00:10 +1000
  • Judy Ollis
    signed 2020-04-21 11:22:54 +1000
  • Pam Ison
    signed 2020-04-19 09:01:06 +1000