In 2020, a Kenyan multi-agency law enforcement team, including customs officials, intercepted a package at Nairobi’s Jomo Kenyatta International Airport.
Agents were suspicious of the shipment, so they opened it up and found two rudimentary bird sculptures. Each, they soon discovered, was filled with live black giant ants – prized in some parts of the world as exotic pets. The shipment was a direct violation of Kenyan law, which requires permits for the export of live wild animals.
The seizure was one of many recently carried out by Kenyan authorities charged with monitoring the illegal international trade in environmentally sensitive commodities.
Since 2019, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), under the Green Customs Initiative, has partnered with the Kenya School of Revenue Administration (KESRA) to support this work. The organization has helped enhance the capacity of customs and frontline officers monitoring trade in environmentally sensitive commodities, including animals, rare woods, and toxic chemicals.
At the heart of these efforts is a team of women led by Alice Kananu, a customs trainer, Latifa Said and Marion Nekesa. These women consistently highlight the importance of environmental protection with regular training activities for newly recruited and seasoned customs officers, who include 545 women.
“I would encourage women to be consistent and stay on course,” said Kananu. “They should be willing to keep learning and developing new competencies throughout their careers to ensure that they remain effective in their roles.”
A growing problem
The international trade of environmentally sensitive commodities is a problem with serious consequences. UNEP’s research shows that it threatens human health and the environment, contributes to species loss, deprives governments of revenues, and undermines the success of international environmental agreements.
Today, environmental crime, including illegal trade in environmentally sensitive commodities, is the fourth-largest criminal activity in the world, growing at a rate of between 5 per cent and 7 per cent per year.
UNEP has estimated the value of the illegal global wildlife trade at $US7 billion to US$23 billion. Illegal and unsustainable wildlife trade can increase human and animal health risks in some cases, given that 75 per cent of all new and emerging human infectious diseases are transmitted from wild animals to humans. The trade of illegal ozone-depleting substances also threatens the recovery of the ozone layer and exacerbates climate change; just one ton of the refrigerant CFC-12 has the same impact as 2,300 cars driven for a year. Additionally, it is estimated that the value of illegally traded mercury is in the range of US$100 – 215 million annually.
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