Why in News ?
- A CITES verification mission (Sept 2025) has recommended that India halt imports of wild animals — especially criticallyendangered species such as gorillas, orangutans, chimpanzees, and snow leopards — until stronger verification, control, and traceability mechanisms are in place.
- The report found gaps in India’s due diligence and verification of animal origin, as several wild species imported as “captive bred” raised concerns about illegal wildlife trade.
Relevance :
GS Paper III (Environment & Biodiversity):
- CITES Convention — structure, appendices, and India’s obligations.
- Wildlife trafficking, traceability, and captive-breeding loopholes.
- Role of MoEFCC, WCCB, and compliance mechanisms.
- Ethical and legal aspects of animal trade.
GS Paper II (Governance & International Relations):
- India’s global environmental diplomacy and treaty compliance.
- Coordination between international and domestic wildlife laws.
Basic Facts
- CITES: Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (1973); India a party since 1976.
- Objective: Ensure that international trade in wild animals and plants does not threaten their survival.
- Appendix I: Species threatened with extinction — trade only under exceptional circumstances.
- Appendix II: Species not necessarily threatened but could become so if trade is not regulated.
- Indian Authority: Wildlife Crime Control Bureau (WCCB), Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC).
Key Findings of the CITES Verification Mission
- Mission Period: September 15–20, 2025
- Sites Inspected:
- Vantara’s Greens Zoological Rescue and Rehabilitation Kingdom (GZRRK), Gujarat
- Radha Krishna Temple Elephant Welfare Trust (RKT EWT), Jamnagar
- Findings:
- India imported a range of critically endangered species reportedly under “captive bred” status.
- 41,839 animals at GZRRK and 594 at RKT EWT—claimed to be under legal acquisition.
- CITES Secretariat noted irregularities in import documentation, raising doubt over the legality of the source.
- Invoices from exporters (e.g., Czech Republic, Germany) contradicted India’s claims about animals’ captive-bred status.
Specific Red Flags
- GZRRK imported two snow leopards (Appendix I species) from Togo with claimed zoo-trade code (Z). Germany and CITES Secretariat found inconsistencies.
- India imported elephants from Myanmar and lions from Burkina Faso, but documentation lacked traceable origin data.
- CITES report: Some animals listed as “bred in captivity” were actually wild-caught and reclassified before export — violating Article IV of CITES.
- Highlighted misuse of purpose codes (T – trade, Z – zoo) and source codes (C – captive-bred, W – wild) in documentation.
Core Concerns
- Traceability Failure: Lack of verification on whether imported animals were genuinely captive-bred.
- Regulatory Gaps: India’s import permits sometimes issued without CITES Secretariat cross-verification.
- Potential Illegal Trade Route:
- Exported from wild-capture countries (Togo, Myanmar)
- Reclassified via intermediate nations (e.g., Germany, Czech Republic)
- Imported into India as captive-bred zoo specimens.
- Due Diligence Deficit: CITES noted India must verify “source, purpose, and transaction authenticity” before granting permits.
Recommendations by CITES
- Suspend imports of wild animals declared as “captive-bred” until India:
- Strengthens verification and control mechanisms.
- Ensures traceable documentation of origin and breeding.
- Submits compliance report to CITES Secretariat.
- Mandate proof of legal acquisition from exporters.
- Reassess import permits granted between 2020–2025.
India’s Position
- India stated that no wild specimens were imported and all animals met CITES norms.
- Claimed animals were rescued or zoo-bound, not for commercial trade.
- MoEFCC assured strict adherence to CITES guidelines and readiness to enhance traceability systems.
Global Context
- Similar controversies have arisen in Thailand, Myanmar, and African states regarding reclassification of wild-caught animals as “captive-bred”.
- Reflects a global loophole in wildlife trade regulation, often exploited by private zoos and exotic pet traders.
Environmental & Ethical Implications
- Encourages illegal poaching in source countries.
- Threatens biodiversity conservation goals under SDG-15 (Life on Land).
- Undermines India’s global image as a wildlife conservation leader.
- Violates Article 51A(g) of the Indian Constitution — duty to protect environment and wildlife.
Way Forward
- Establish National CITES Verification Authority for real-time tracking of imports.
- Implement DNA profiling and microchipping for imported species.
- Enforce import moratorium on high-risk species until compliance verified.
- Increase bilateral coordination with exporting nations and CITES Secretariat.
- Integrate digital permit traceability (blockchain-based) for transparency.


