CITES Calls For Temporary Halt On India’s Wildlife Imports Pending Stronger Checks

After reviewing imports to Jamnagar’s facilities, CITES recommends India tighten verification to ensure no wild-caught animals enter as captive-bred
CITES Calls For Temporary Halt On India’s Wildlife Imports
Endangered species transfers are now under global scrutiny as CITES calls for stronger sourcing checks and clearer documentation.Vantara/Instagram
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When a zoo or rescue centre brings in an animal from another country, the journey on paper is often just as complex as the one in the cargo hold. Every transfer must pass through layers of checks, codes, and clearances—ensuring the animal wasn’t taken illegally, traded commercially without permission, or pushed through a loophole disguised as “rescue” or “rehabilitation.” Now, after a verification mission to India this year, the global wildlife trade regulator believes our current system may not be doing enough to ensure that crucial traceability.

A recent report by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) has recommended that India temporarily pause the import of certain endangered species until stronger checks and documentation safeguards are put in place. The recommendation comes after the committee reviewed import practices linked to the Greens Zoological Rescue and Rehabilitation Centre (GZRRC) and the Radha Krishna Temple Elephant Welfare Trust (RKTEWT) in Jamnagar—facilities that together house tens of thousands of animals and have become central to India’s high-profile wildlife rescue narrative.

Why The Pause?

The CITES mission acknowledged the facilities in Jamnagar operate at exceptionally high standards, with extensive veterinary support, open spaces, and specialised care environments. The committee also did not find evidence of commercial trading intent, nor of animals arriving without valid documentation. Yet, the concern lies not inside the enclosures—but in the paperwork that clears animals for export, transit, and entry into India.

The report observed cases where animals marked as “captive bred” may have originally been taken from the wild, especially in countries not known to maintain successful captive-breeding programs for those species. In some instances, the purpose-of-use or source codes on permits did not match the explanations provided. For example, shipments listed as zoological transfers appeared to have originated from commercial breeding facilities, where animals are typically “sold” rather than “rescued” or “rehomed.” In other cases, countries that have not publicly traded certain protected species in decades were listed as source points.

A Question Of Due Diligence

FOX
As India reviews wildlife import permits, conservationists stress the need for tighter traceability to prevent illegal capture from the wild.Vantara/Instagram

Indian authorities have argued that all imported animals entered through valid CITES permits, and recent Supreme Court findings also supported that no statutory violations occurred in the acquisitions reviewed. However, the CITES committee highlighted that validity of permits alone may not be sufficient if external verification is not consistently enforced. The report noted that when one exporting country labels a transfer as commercial but the receiving documentation lists it as zoological, India must clarify—not simply accept the importer’s interpretation.

One example involved snow leopards routed through Europe, where differing purpose codes on export and import paperwork went unresolved before approval. In another case, India had cleared an import of chimpanzees from Cameroon, only to later learn the export permits from that country were forged—something that could have been pre-empted, the committee said, with closer reference to CITES trade databases.

What Happens Next

The CITES committee has recommended that India temporarily halt further imports of high-risk and critically endangered species—such as great apes, cheetahs, snow leopards, and several exotic primates—until new verification and tracking measures are formalised. India has been asked to review transactions flagged in the report and submit its findings within 90 days at the next CITES Standing Committee meeting in Uzbekistan.

This does not mean the centres in Jamnagar will lose any animals already under their care, nor does it imply wrongdoing or mistreatment. The focus now turns to how India’s wildlife authorities and global partners can ensure that rescue, research, and conservation programmes do not inadvertently fuel illegal capture or shadow trade elsewhere.

The heart of the matter is simple, even if the logistics are not: in protecting endangered species, good intentions must be backed by vigorous systems. And when the world is watching—paper trails need to be as strong as the fences that keep the animals safe.

FAQs

1. What has CITES recommended to India?
CITES has urged India to temporarily pause imports of certain endangered wildlife until stricter verification, documentation, and tracking procedures are in place.

2. Which facilities were reviewed in the report?
The review focused on the Greens Zoological Rescue and Rehabilitation Centre (GZRRC) and the Radha Krishna Temple Elephant Welfare Trust (RKTEWT) in Jamnagar.

3. Did CITES find evidence of illegal animal trade at these centres?
No. CITES did not find evidence of commercial wildlife trading or animals arriving without permits. The concerns relate to gaps in permit verification and source documentation.

4. Why are the permit codes and sourcing details important?
These codes confirm whether an animal is captive-bred, seized, rescued, or wild-caught. Incorrect or unclear codes can mask illegal capture or misrepresent an animal’s origin.

5. What happens next?
India has been asked to improve due-diligence checks and submit a compliance report before the next CITES Standing Committee meeting. The recommended pause applies only to future imports, not animals already in care.

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