JOHANNESBURG: The United Nations on Wednesday banned global trade in highly endangered pangolins, a scaly animal with the dubious distinction of being the world’s most poached mammal.

Member states of the UN’s Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, known as CITES, voted to place the eight species of pangolin on the convention’s “Appendix I”, which prohibits any cross-border movement in the animals or their body parts for commercial purposes.

“Giving pangolins full protection under CITES will eliminate any question about legality of trade, making it harder for criminals to traffic them and increasing the consequences for those who do”, said Ginette Hemley of conservation group WWF.

All eight of the world’s species of pangolin, which range from 12 to 39 inches in length, are threatened with extinction.

Published in Dawn September 29th, 2016

Opinion

Editorial

Terrorism challenge
Updated 05 Mar, 2025

Terrorism challenge

Pakistan has few options but to cooperate on the counterterrorism issue with Kabul.
Ad ban
05 Mar, 2025

Ad ban

SILENCING criticism is no solution, whether the issue at hand is social, political, or of any other nature....
Demand for solar power
05 Mar, 2025

Demand for solar power

A GREAT solar rush across Pakistan is transforming the nation’s energy landscape. Households and businesses are...
IMF scrutiny
Updated 04 Mar, 2025

IMF scrutiny

Boosting economic stability, flows from multilateral agencies, and sovereign credit rating upgrade depend on IMF review's success.
Diplomatic protocol
04 Mar, 2025

Diplomatic protocol

IT is a fact that KP — which shares a long border with Afghanistan — is directly affected by cross-border...
Polio politics
04 Mar, 2025

Polio politics

THE dispute between the centre and Punjab over the detection of polio cases in Mandi Bahauddin is unnecessary and...