BirdLife International in Indochina
December 2008 Number 28 Welcome Jonathan C. Eames Features CEPF-RIT December 2008 update A successful project: Natmataung NP Regional news Two new species of fish discovered Two new species of shrew discovered Four new species of frog discovered New population of Tonkin Snubnosed Monkey discovered Rafetus swinhoei held hostage Tay Za logging in Karen State Vietnam embassy staff possibly involved in illegal rhino horn trafficking Important Bird Area news Permian visit Western Siem Pang IBA, Cambodia Rarest of the rare Project updates Bengal Florican White-shouldered Ibis Publications Reviews Staff news BirdLife International in Indochina is a subregional programme of the BirdLife Secretariat operating in Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam. It currently has two offices in the region: Vietnam Programme Office, N6/2+3, Lane 25, Lang Ha Street, Ba Dinh District, Hanoi, Vietnam. Tel: +84(0)43 514890 Cambodia Programme Office, #61B, Street 386, Sangkat Boeung Keng Kang III, Khan Chamkarmon, Phnom Penh. Cambodia. Tel/Fax: +85523993631 www.birdlifeinindichina.org
The Babbler December 2008
As 2008 draws to a close it is customary, if somewhat clichéd, to ponder what was our greatest achievement in the old year. Without doubt our single most important achievement in 2008 was in securing an agreement with the Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund to deliver its conservation investment in the Indochina region. This opportunity will propel BirdLife from being a small player on the conservation scene to becoming a donor. I hope that we will be able to meet the expectations of CEPF, its donors and beneficiaries and repay the trust shown in BirdLife. The great opportunity presented by CEPF is that the money is for civil society exclusively! Of course working successfully with government is always our wish but it is not the only way to achieve conservation in our region. If anyone needed a better reminder of the distance we still must travel to ensure effective government-led conservation in our region one need only look no further than Vietnam. 2008 will be remembered as the year the Government of Vietnam decided to build a surfaced road through the Cat Loc sector of Cat Tien National Park. Cat Loc supports (it is believed) one of only two remaining populations of Javan Rhinoceros, and the only population on the South-east Asian mainland. This is a tremendously disappointing outcome after the years of conservation investment at this site by the international community. How could it happen? Not content with failing to adequately conserve its own rhinos, the Vietnamese government is now complicit in poaching South Africas’ world famous rhino populations it labored for a century restoring. Vietnam emerged in 2008 as a major player in the smuggling of rhino horn from South Africa. It then emerged that a Vietnamese embassy staffer Mrs. Vu Moc Anh was recalled by Hanoi after receiving a bag containing rhino horn. The South African authorities went on to accuse Vietnamese embassy staff of using diplomatic pouches to smuggle rhino horn out of the country. Clearly, Vietnam’s Javan Rhinos cannot count on the support of the government and it is time to hand their custody over to the NGO conservation community, a position for which I have long argued. If this happened, CEPF funds could be used to catalyze the conservation effort.
The Babbler is the quarterly newsletter of BirdLife International in Indochina. This quarter it is complied by Simon Mahood and edited by Jonathan C. Eames eames@birdlife.org.vn. The views expressed are those of contributors and are not necessarily those of BirdLife International. 1