Wildlife Crime

James Morgan

Client: World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF)
All photography, audio and video: James Morgan.
Music: Christopher Goze, David O’Brian & Tom Quick
Maps and animation: Claire Pinegar

Poaching of protected animals for their tusks and other body parts is funding militia in many fragile states and governments like Gabon are becoming increasingly alarmed by the threat posed by wildlife trafficking to national security. Rebel groups, drug syndicates and even terrorist networks have seen an opportunity to profit from a low risk, high reward criminal enterprise. To safeguard its remaining elephants, Gabon President Ali Bongo has quadrupled the number of park rangers in the country. Bongo also presided over the burning of $10 million worth of illegal ivory seized from poachers, to ensure that none leaked back into the illegal trade.

On the other end of the trade, the final products are nearly unrecognizable. Jewellery and amulets made from ivory are sold in up-scale, air conditioned Thai boutiques whilst other animal parts are used in traditional medicines.

Wildlife crime not only threatens nature’s most iconic species but exacerbates poverty and corruption, funding an entire spectrum of related international crime. This short film traces the story from beginning to end, across continents, offering a sense of the fragility of the human lives that lie in its wake.


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