Worlds
largest tiger skin just a mouse-click away
New
Delhi, March 07, 2002: For bazee.com, it
was just another auction. But for Wildlife Trust of
India it was an eye-opener. A tiger skin was under
the hammer for $1 million on the site, and was being
touted as the worlds largest tiger skin, at
11ft 7 inches.
WTI sleuths bid for the tiger skin posing
as Andrew Jhonson, based in New York. WTI won the
bid and the owner, one Deepak Chandra of Meerut, sent
three photographs of the skin and a copy of the ownership
certificate. The ownership certificate bears the date
of January 25, 1989 and has the signature and seal
of the chief wildlife warden of Uttar Pradesh.
Though the sale may not be entirely
illegal as under the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972,
sale and gifting of wildlife trophies are permitted,
provided the owner had obtained a legal ownership
certificate. WTI verified the details of the ownership
certificate from Dr.R.L.Singh, Chief Conservator of
Forests and Chief Wildlife Warden of Uttar Pradesh.
The papers were found to be genuine.
However,
Mr. Ashok Kumar, senior advisor and trustee of WTI,
points out that under the garb of a legal certificate
many illegal skins are sold. He cites the case of
Jabalpur resident who had four legally certified skins.
He used to sell the many skins, taking care
to keep only four at his residence each time. But
was finally arrested, he says. Other such cases
have also happened in the past.
WTI has been lobbying with the government
to change the WPA so that trophies cannot be sold
or gifted but only inherited. After four years
of working on the draft the Ministry of Environment
and Forests prepared a draft amendment but the amendment
is yet to be table in Parliament.
Itis such a shame that we are
still selling tiger skins despite tigers being protected
under Schedule I of the WPA, says Mr. Kumar.