Google – AFP, Beh Lih Yi (AFP), 17 March 2013
![]() |
Image taken
on January 2, 2013 shows shark fins drying in the sun on the
roof of a factory
building in Hong Kong (AFP/File, Antony Dickson)
|
HONG KONG —
A conservation victory restricting global trade in more shark species will take
a fresh bite at Hong Kong's market in fins, which has already been hit hard by
persistent attacks from anti-fin campaigners.
Defiant fin
merchants insisted the impact of the restrictions would be minimal as they
would continue to import other species not covered by the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) agreement.
And a local
anti-fin lobby group warned the measures, which aim to protect the oceanic
whitetip shark, the porbeagle and three types of hammerhead, would be hard to
enforce.
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Sharks endangered (AFP/Graphics)
|
New figures
show shark fin imports dropped off dramatically last year to 3,351 tonnes from
10,340 tonnes in 2011, after some prominent Hong Kong hotels and restaurants
struck it from their menus.
Hong Kong
has traditionally handled around half of all global trade, exporting most fins
to mainland China where they are considered a rare delicacy.
On
"Dried Seafood Street", a pungent thoroughfare at the centre of the
city's shark fin trade, dozens of shops show off their goods, from
lower-quality fins wrapped in plastic to the premium variety displayed behind
glass that fetch up to HK$10,000 ($1,300) per kilogram (two pounds).
"More
and more young people think having shark fin soup is cruel," trader
Frederick Yu said.
"For
Chinese, the only two delicacies we have are abalone and shark fins. The
Westerners eat caviar and foie gras, is that not cruel? Why do they stop us
from eating shark fins?"
But Yu, who
has been in the business for over 10 years, said he supported the
sustainability of shark populations, adding that environmentalists were unfair
to target traders.
Despite
opposition from China and Japan, the 178-member CITES conference in Bangkok
approved a deal that requires countries to issue export permits to ensure the
sustainability of the sharks in the wild, otherwise they could face sanctions.
But Ho
Siu-chai, the chairman of the Hong Kong Shark Fin Trade Merchants Association
said the restrictions would only affect one-tenth of current business.
"It's
not an issue for us -- we have about 400 shark species, we can always import
other species," he told AFP.
"We
see it positively. We don't oppose the new restrictions."
![]() |
Image taken
on September 5, 2012 shows a customer talking to a shopkeeper
in a store
selling shark fins in Hong Kong (AFP/File, Philippe Lopez)
|
Humans kill
about 100 million sharks each year, mostly for their fins, according to the UN
Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), which says 90 percent of the marine
predators have disappeared over the past 100 years.
The
brutality of the practice sees fishermen slice off the fins before throwing
sharks back in the water to die, campaigners say.
Hong Kong
director for US-based Shark Savers, Silvy Pun, said while the three species
already under CITES protection -- the great white, whale shark and basking
shark -- are larger in size and more easily identified, the newly-listed
species were hard to differentiate.
"The
next step for Hong Kong will be very, very challenging," she said.
"The
only way you can identify them correctly is DNA identification but as far as I
know, this is not very well-developed yet (in Hong Kong)."
The
government's conservation department said it would abide by the CITES restrictions,
which must be introduced within 18 months, but would not elaborate on how it
was planning to step up enforcement.
In the face
of public distaste, some traders have stopped drying fins in the open on the
pavement, moving them instead to rooftop locations.
And Pun was
hopeful that the tide is turning.
"Hong
Kong as a shark capital has the responsibility to conserve the shark
population. Now we can take bigger steps to conserve sharks -- we can start and
we can change," she said.
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