The inhumanity of the animal rights lobby
We should never forget that The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
We should never forget that The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
By Dr. Nikolas Sellheim Introduction In a forthcoming peer-reviewed study in the Review of European, Comparative
Indigenous, non-indigenous campaigners and experts who attended the world’s first Our Land Our Nature Congress released a
We should never forget that The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
Author Gail C. Thomson. Originally published on Conservation Namibia. The early 1980s was a tough
Originally published on Ecology and Society. ABSTRACT Human-wildlife conflicts are a global problem, and are
We should never forget that The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals was established 50 years before the Royal Society for the
Conservation Influencers is a searchable directory of the animal activist, environmental and ecological lobby. It examines the history, mission, methodology and reputation of NGOs to assess their impact on the global conservation cause.
From 1990 until 2015, Franz Weber Foundation (FFW) managed the Fazao-Malfakassa National Park in Togo, which was, according to an in-depth investigation by Duke University, ‘established by forcing the local communities off their land and without taking into consideration their point of view’. That same study cited convincing evidence from reports published in 1990, confirming that competition for land use was already ‘creating conflict between the local communities and park managers’. In 2015 Togo refused to renew FFW’s contract because, the report says, ‘local communities were still excluded from the management of the natural resources of their land’ and FFW had ‘failed to fulfil its contract’. Franz Weber Foundation plays a major role within CITES because it funds and manages from Switzerland the African Elephant Coalition (AEC), which represents 32 African range states, some of which have barely any elephants and others none at all. Contrary to the wishes of the range states in Southern Africa, which manage most of the world’s wild elephant populations, the AEC at CITES’ CoPs repeatedly tables proposals to put all of the world’s elephants in appendix I. And the AEC uses its voting power to keep in place prohibitions on ivory sales and all other trade in elephant-related derivatives, including skins and hair, which Southern African nations wish to legalise.
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