International travel with dogs no longer illegal: CITES
Millions of dogs owners the world over can breathe a sigh of relief
now that transporting their undocumented pooches across a national
border is no longer a crime.
Due to a mix up over species names, international travel with Fido or
Rover, absent a certificate of origin and an export permit, was
technically illegal until the UN body overseeing commerce in wildlife
set things right earlier this month.
Blame it on the Grey Wolf, a.k.a. Canis lupus, covered since 1997 by
Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species (CITES).
Appendix II requires countries to track exports of a given species,
and to demonstrate that any hunting or harvesting is done in a
sustainable manner.
Recently re-classified as a sub-species of C. lupus, the domesticated
dog, along with the Australian dingo, were in a single stroke subject to
the same regulations protecting the wolf. “Because scientists are
constantly changing the nomenclature and taxonomy, the dingo and the
normal dog, my beagle, for example, were suddenly a CITES species,”
explained the UN body’s out-going Secretary-General, Willem Wijnstekers.
The unintended ban on cross-border travel with household canines was
never enforced.
But at least now dog owners can bring their four-footed friends along
without trafficking in contraband.
AFP
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