TNAG-0469-FCO40-534-Legislation-for-protection-of-wild-life-in-Hong-Kong-1974 — Page 20

FCO40 Hong Kong Department Records 聯邦事務部香港部檔案 All

Foreign and Commonwealth Office London SW1

File

Miss PR Morse

West Winds

Coleford Road

Tutshill

Chepstow

·

LAST

REF

NE

Telephone 01-

REF.

(179)

Your reterence

Our reference

Date

26 June 1974

You wrote to Sir Alec Douglas Home on the 20 January about the import of wildlife from China into Hong Kong. Miss Kelly of this Department replied on 29 January saying that the questions raised by the BBC programme were being looked into and that a fuller reply would be sent as soon as possible.

The Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the Governor of Hong Kong have been examining with care what is being done and should be done to deal with this difficult and complex problem; I am sorry that for this reason, I have not been able to reply to your letter more quickly.

Hong Kong is, of course, predominantly a Chinese society. The Hong Kong Government do not seek to dictate to their people what they should or should not eat, provided that the animals and birds are humanely treated and killed, and that internationally accepted restrictions on trade in endangered species are observed. The Hong Kong Government are, however, well aware of the problems which arise from the wildlife trade and have recently passed further legislation and taken other measures to deal with them.

As far as endangered species are concerned, the Hong Kong Government have already banned, as from 1 January 1974, the importation of threatened species listed in Appendix 1 to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora. As for other potentially endangered species, such as those in Appendix II of the Convention, the decision on whether they were in fact endangered would be, under the Convention, for the Chinese Government. Our Ambassador in Peking has therefore raised the problem with the Chinese authorities. The Chinese Government already pay great attention to the protection of their own wildlife resources, and they have now undertaken to look into this question.

/There

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