Peru and Kenya to sponsor draft resolution on crimes that affect the environment for UNEA-7
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Peru, a member of the Nature Crime Alliance, and Kenya have announced that they will sponsor a draft resolution – ‘Enhancing the international response to address crimes that affect the environment’ – for the upcoming 7th UN Environment Assembly (UNEA-7). The announcement of possible draft resolutions came during the annual subcommittee meeting of the Committee of Permanent Representatives to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Twelfth Meeting. Peru and Kenya participated in a Nature Crime Alliance side event at UNEA-6 last year, during which UNEP announced its membership of the Alliance.
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UN Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC) – feedback sought on environmental crime and corruption
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The UNCAC Coalition’s Environmental Crime and Corruption Working Group, chaired by Wildlife Justice Commission (WJC), is seeking to address knowledge gaps and highlight good practices in UNCAC implementation, with a particular focus on corruption, crimes that affect the environment, and climate. They have prepared a document to capture feedback from stakeholders working on this issue. If you wish to provide inputs, please do so by this Friday (26 September) in the document here
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Earth League International launches WildLeaks in Cambodia and the Netherlands
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Earth League International (ELI) has launched its WildLeaks platform in Cambodia and the Netherlands to expand its efforts to fight wildlife trafficking. Managed by ELI, WildLeaks is the world’s first secure, anonymous whistleblowing platform dedicated exclusively to environmental and wildlife crime. By activating WildLeaks in Cambodia and the Netherlands, ELI is targeting critical transportation nodes used by transnational wildlife crime networks. WildLeaks has led to the exposure of wildlife crime around the world since its launch in 2014, including an ELI report on the amur tiger earlier this year.
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UNODC publishes new report on crimes in the minerals sector
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The UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has published the latest addition to its Global Analysis on Crimes that Affect the Environment. The new report, ‘Minerals Crime: Crimes in the Supply Chains of Critical Transition Minerals’, presents the state of knowledge on illegal activity in this crucial industry. It presents what is currently known about the actors, modus operandi, and vulnerabilities as well as documenting how crimes involving these minerals differ to crimes involving gold. View the report
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WJC and TRAFFIC brief UK policymakers on environmental crime
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WJC and TRAFFIC participated in a joint briefing to the UK’s All-Party Parliamentarian Groups (APPGs) on International Conservation and Anti-Corruption and Responsible Tax earlier this month. The briefing, ‘How Dirty Money is Destroying the Planet’, was held at the UK Parliament, and explored the intersection of environmental crime and corruption and the actions needed to address this key global challenge, including at the UNCAC Conference of the States Parties in December this year.
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FACT Coalition highlights threats posed by illegal gold mining
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A recent report from the FACT Coalition makes the case that illegal gold mining has become a crisis too large for the United States to ignore. ‘Addressing Illegal Gold Mining in the Western Hemisphere: New Approaches for U.S. Policy’ analyses current threats posed by illegal gold mining, gold trafficking, and associated money laundering, drawing on examples from select South American countries – Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, and Venezuela. The report concludes by presenting solutions that the United States should adopt to address the threats posed by illegal gold mining. Read the report
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WRI Event: Deforestation in the Congo Basin
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WRI Africa and Global Forest Watch (GFW) are partnering on a webinar focusing on deforestation in the Congo Basin. Forest fires reached record levels in 2024, but they are not the only drivers of forest loss. This webinar will explore why deforestation persists in the Congo Basin, the effectiveness of current actions, and what sustainable solutions could reverse the trend. The webinar will be convened in French with live English interpretation, and takes place on Thursday 25 September, 9:00am ET / 2:00pm WAT. Find out more.
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