Steven R. Galster | |
---|---|
Born | Detroit, Michigan, USA | December 28, 1961
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | George Washington University |
Occupation(s) | Chairman, Freeland |
Notable work | Co-Founder of WildAid Co-Founder of Wildlife Alliance Co-designed and launched ASEAN Wildlife Enforcement Network, ASEAN-WEN Founder of Freeland Foundation |
Website | freeland |
Steven R. Galster (born December 28, 1961, in Detroit, Michigan) is an American environmental and human rights investigator and counter-trafficking program designer. Since 1987, he has planned and participated in investigations and remedial programs to stop wildlife and human trafficking and to mitigate corruption and build governance in Asia, Africa, Russia, South America, and the USA.
Galster graduated from Grinnell College in 1984 with a B.A. in Liberal Arts, focusing on Political Science and International Relations. He was awarded the Grinnell Alumni Award 25 years later. [1] In 1988, he graduated from George Washington University, with an M.A. in Security Policy Studies. He focused on US-Soviet Cold War relations, with an emphasis on superpower competition along the 3rd World periphery.
Galster led the National Security Archive's Afghanistan Project, which took him to the field with Soviet soldiers and Mujahedeen rebels, where he documented the trafficking in guns and heroin among all combatants. When mainstream media and the White House forecasted a quick rebel victory against the Soviet-backed regime, Galster predicted a protracted war in which hardline rebels would eventually use American-sponsored training and technology against the west. [2] [3] [4]
In the early 90s, Galster led investigations for the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) into African elephant and rhino poaching and the nexus with arms trafficking in Central and Southern Africa. His investigations led him to the world's largest illegal stash of rhino horn in southern China. His undercover film of the traffickers with their stockpiles acquired from North Korean diplomats and other sources was aired on CNN and used by Chinese police to locate the contraband and arrest the gang. The Chinese Government then destroyed the stockpile on public TV and reaffirmed their support for a ban on rhino horn trade. [5] Galster led another investigation for the EIA into illegal whale meat trafficking between the South Pacific and Japan. Supported by Filipino activists and fishermen, his findings and covert film were featured on BBC's "Whale Wars," which was released when the International Whaling Commission met in Japan, as governments debated the ban on commercial whaling. [6]
Hired by the UK-based Tiger Trust, Galster moved to Russia to help design and oversee the development of Operation Amba, a counter-poaching program that aimed to reduce poaching of Siberian tigers in the Far East. [7] Operation Amba has been widely successful, having saved cub tigers, made seizures of illegal poaching materials, and raided illegal operations and poaching rings. [8] It is credited for bringing the Siberian tiger back from the brink of extinction in the mid-1990s and helping stabilize the population after years of heavy poaching. [9]
In 1995, Steve Galster and Michael C. Mitchell co-founded the Global Survival Network (GSN), an environmental NGO. Steve Galster served as its executive director. Among its many campaigns, GSN devised and developed the Asian Conservation Awareness Programme (ACAP), with the mission to bring awareness and lead to increased public sympathy for endangered wildlife and decreased consumption of endangered species products. GSN's work included the establishing of the Amur Tiger Sanctuary in Russia. The Sanctuary introduced armed ranger patrols to stop the threat that poachers played in the region. This work was soon funded by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and is currently carried out with the support of the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (Russia). As a result of this work, the wild Siberian Tiger population has rebounded from their critical endangered level. [10]
In order to strengthen the Sanctuary efforts to stop poaching, Galster conducted undercover video interviews with the poachers. Through these undercover meetings, he discovered a powerful link between animal poachers and human traffickers. What began as an effort to preserve habitat became an international exposé on trafficking. From 1995 to 1997, GSN undertook a two-year undercover investigation personally holding meetings with traffickers and trafficked women to expose the international relationship between animal and human trafficking.
Information and undercover video derived from their investigation were used to create a GSN written report, "Crime & Servitude" [11] and a video documentary, "Bought & Sold". [12] The film was released in 1997 and received widespread media coverage in the US and abroad, including specials on ABC Primetime Live, CNN, and BBC.
The documentary also helped to catalyze legislative reform on trafficking as well as new financial resources to address the problem. [13]
With new co-directors, Galster and his new management colleagues re-branded Global Survival Network (GSN) as WildAid. The co-directors included: Suwanna Gauntlett, a major funder of GSN and other organizations, Peter Knights, the originator of ACAP, and Steve Trent to run the organization, which now focused on wildlife crime. [14] [15] WildAid had three broad aims: hunting down and stopping poachers; exposing and eliminating black-market trafficking operations; and using public-awareness campaigns to stop the human consumption of exotic plants and animals. Galster ran WildAid's Bangkok office where he led a campaign to stop people from eating shark fin soup. [16] According to shark fin dealers, the campaign resulted in a 70% reduction in shark fin consumption in Thailand, which prompted outrage by the merchants. Galster and WildAid were sued by Bangkok-based shark fin dealers for $3 million, but after 3 years he and his office won the suit. [17] During this period under WildAid, Galster helped develop a ranger anti-poaching training and support programs in Khao Yai National Park, which evolved into a regional nature protection training center. WildAid partnered with the Wildlife Conservation Society to initiate the training program. [18]
In 2004, WildAid split into two organizations: WildAid and Wildlife Alliance. Gauntlett ran the latter and Galster stayed with her operation. In October 2004, Galster wrote the opening speech for the 13th UN Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna CITES, delivered by then Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, proposing the creation of a Southeast Asian Regional Wildlife Enforcement Network. [19] [20] The development of the network was funded through Wildlife Alliance, by the US State Department, and later by The United States Agency for International Development with Galster serving as the USAID program head (Chief of Party). Together with other US State Department projects, Galster worked with his senior staff members, to supervise $30 million of USG-sponsored governance, law enforcement, and behavior change activities over the next 10 years to reduce wildlife crimes in Southeast Asia and China. [21] [22]
In 2008, wishing to return to the broader mandate of counter wildlife and human trafficking, Steve Galster founded Freeland Foundation now known as Freeland. He served as its first executive director, while remaining the role of USAID's Chief of Party for 3 consecutive USAID programs (total of 11 years) while also hosting 15 TV shows that followed Freeland's counter-trafficking investigations and field operations. [23] [24]
Freeland's mission is to protect vulnerable people and wildlife from being trafficked. Its team of law enforcement, behavior change, and development experts works alongside government officers, local communities and other NGOs in Asia, Africa and the Americas to stop the 200 billion dollar illicit trade in people and wildlife." [25]
Some of Freeland's achievements under Galster's direction and leadership include:
Thailand's Indochinese Tiger: Galster and his Freeland team helped rural villagers climb out of poverty, while establishing an elite ranger force to fight off exploitative traffickers and save this endangered big cat from extinction. It is now a breeding, growing population. [26]
African Elephants: Under Galster's direction, a Freeland-backed Task Force identified and arrested over 40 key corrupt government and corporate officers who were operating between Africa and Asia (between 2015 and 2018). Through Freeland, the African Task Force shared information with their Asian counterparts to begin dismantling the syndicates sponsoring the killings of the African Elephants. [27]
Galster and his Freeland team, with the support of ASEAN Wildlife Enforcement Network (ASEAN-WEN), designed and launched the world's largest and most active and effective cross border wildlife enforcement operations, that was run by 25 governments resulting in unprecedented numbers of arrests and seizures. [28]
Central Asian women were discovered by Freeland to be working as Sex Slaves between Southeast Asia and the Middle East. Freeland's information was used to arrest the traffickers and free dozens of Uzbek victims, many who were repatriated to their homeland. [29] [30]
Burmese Teenage Girls were discovered by Freeland to be working as Sex Slaves in Thailand, and later freed thanks to Freeland-backed undercover operations. [31]
Thai and Vietnamese women were discovered by Freeland to be working as Sex Slaves in Malaysia, recruited through deceitful Facebook ads. A Freeland-backed Task Force freed the women, arrested the Kingpin, and made him financially compensate his victims. [32]
In 2014–2015, Galster and the Freeland team started to investigate the Xaysavang Network, an international wildlife trafficking syndicate that facilitated the killing of endangered elephants, rhinos, pangolins, and other species for products such as ivory and rhino horn. They discovered a wider syndicate encircling this network company, including Vietnamese Organized Crime, corrupt officers from Laos, Thailand, South Africa, and Mozambique. Galster coined the syndicate "Hydra" because it was hydra-headed. Continued attempts to dismantle Hydra ran into bureaucracy, indifference and corruption. [33] Galster investigated and traced the supply chain of Hydra and at least one competitor into Africa, setting up an operation in partnership with the Lusaka Agreement Task Force (LATF) and the African Wildlife Foundation. The Freeland-Africa program helped LATF identify and arrest numerous high level criminals who were supplying illicit elephant tusks, big cat skeletons, pangolin scales, and rhino horns to Asia. Galster and his investigation team provided key insights to The Guardian newspaper's 3-part series on global wildlife trafficking that identified members and modus operandi of Hydra. [34] [35]
Galster and Freeland partner with a variety of organizations, including:
Poaching is the illegal hunting or capturing of wild animals, usually associated with land use rights. Poaching was once performed by impoverished peasants for subsistence purposes and to supplement meager diets. It was set against the hunting privileges of nobility and territorial rulers.
WildAid is an environmental organization based in San Francisco, California, United States.
Environmental issues in Kenya include deforestation, soil erosion, desertification, water shortage and degraded water quality, flooding, poaching, and domestic and industrial pollution.
The Wildlife Trust of India is an Indian nature conservation organisation.
Wildlife trade refers to the products that are derived from non-domesticated animals or plants usually extracted from their natural environment or raised under controlled conditions. It can involve the trade of living or dead individuals, tissues such as skins, bones or meat, or other products. Legal wildlife trade is regulated by the United Nations' Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), which currently has 184 member countries called Parties. Illegal wildlife trade is widespread and constitutes one of the major illegal economic activities, comparable to the traffic of drugs and weapons.
TRAFFIC, the Wildlife Trade Monitoring Network, is a global non-governmental organization monitoring the trade in wild plants and animals. TRAFFIC focuses on preserving biodiversity and sustainable legal wildlife trade while working against unsustainable illegal wildlife trade. It was originally created in 1976 as a specialist group of the Species Survival Commission of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), and evolved into a strategic alliance of the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and the IUCN.
Kathi Lynn Austin is an expert on arms trafficking, peace and security, and human rights. She has investigated the illegal trade in weapons, illicit trafficking operations, illegal resource exploitation and terrorism for over 20 years, and has documented conflicts in Africa, Latin America, East and Central Europe, and South Asia.
Wildlife Alliance is an international non-profit forest and wildlife conservation organization with current programs in Cambodia. It is headquartered in New York City, with offices in Phnom Penh. The logo of the organization is the Asian elephant, an emblematic species and the namesake for the Southwest Elephant Corridor that Wildlife Alliance saved when it was under intense threat of poaching and habitat destruction in 2001. It is today one of the last remaining unfragmented elephant corridors in Asia. Due to Government rangers' and Wildlife Alliance's intensive anti-poaching efforts, there have been zero elephant killings since 2006. Dr. Suwanna Gauntlett is the Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Wildlife Alliance, and one of the original founders of WildAid. The organization is governed by a board of directors and an international advisory board that provides guidance on strategy, fundraising, and outreach.
The Wildlife Protection Society of India (WPSI) was founded in 1994 by Belinda Wright, its Executive Director, who was an award-winning wildlife photographer and filmmaker till she took up the cause of conservation. From its inception, WPSI's main aim has been to bring a new focus to the daunting task of tackling India's growing wildlife crisis. It does this by providing support and information to government authorities to combat poaching and the escalating illegal wildlife trade - particularly in wild tigers. It has now broadened its focus to deal with human-animal conflicts and provide support for research projects.
Wildlife smuggling or wildlife trafficking concerns the illegal gathering and trade of endangered species and protected wildlife, including plants and byproducts or products utilizing a species. Research on wildlife smuggling has increased, however, knowledge of the illicit trade remains limited. The differences between international policies and tendencies likely contribute to the extensive estimated range of wildlife smuggling, anywhere from $5-$23 billion, with an additional $67-$193 billion when timber and fish are included. The prolific growth of wildlife smuggling makes it the fourth-largest criminal enterprise globally after drug, firearm, and human trafficking. Products demanded by the trade include but are not limited to ivory, bushmeat, traditional medicine, and exotic pets. China and the United States are the largest buyers in the illegal wildlife trade. It often involves other illegal activities such as tranquilizing animals without proper authorization.
Esmond Bradley Martin was an American conservationist who fought for both the preservation of elephants against the illegal ivory trade, and for the rhinoceros against the illegal trade of rhinoceros horns. A trained geographer, Martin was considered a world-renowned expert in the ivory trade and rhinoceros horn trade. He had been a special envoy of the United Nations for the conservation of rhinoceros. Militant for a reduction in the demand for ivory to dry up the market, he participated notably in the stop of rhinoceros horn trade to China in 1993 and ivory in 2017.
The ivory trade is the commercial, often illegal trade in the ivory tusks of the hippopotamus, walrus, narwhal, black and white rhinos, mammoth, and most commonly, African and Asian elephants.
The Freeland Foundation is an international NGO headquartered in Bangkok which works in Asia on environmental conservation and on human rights. The organization intends to stop wildlife and human trafficking.
The ASEAN Wildlife Enforcement Network (ASEAN-WEN) was officially launched on 1 December 2005, as a regional inter-agency and inter-governmental initiative to counter the illegal cross-border trade in endangered flora and fauna. It helps countries share information on and tackle cross-border wildlife crime and facilitates the exchange of regional best practices in combating those crimes. As the world's largest wildlife law enforcement network, it comprises the law enforcement agencies of the 10 ASEAN countries forming a regional intergovernmental law-enforcement network.
The Wildlife Conservation Network (WCN) is a United States-based 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that protects endangered wildlife by supporting conservationists in the field who promote coexistence between wildlife and people. WCN does this by providing its partners with capital, strategic capacity-building services, training, and operational support. WCN has been given a top rating amongst wildlife conservation charities, with a four star rating on Charity Navigator.
Education for Nature Vietnam (ENV) was set up in 2000 and according to their website is Vietnam's "first local non-governmental organization to focus on wildlife protection."
The Wildlife Justice Commission (WJC) is an international foundation set up in 2015, and with headquarters in The Hague, the Netherlands. The organisation operates globally with the mission to disrupt and help dismantle organised transnational criminal networks trading in wildlife, timber and fish. The WJC collects evidence with the aim of turning it into accountability.
Michael C. Mitchell is an American planner, designer, lecturer and environmentalist. He works on rural development.
The wildlife trafficking network in southern Africa involves the illicit extraction, transportation and transaction of wildlife within and across the nations of Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa and Eswatini. Involvement in the illegal trading network can be divided into three general roles: poachers, traffickers and intermediaries, and consumers. There are a wide range of motives depending on an individual's role in the network. Some motivations include profit, sustenance, and reducing human-wildlife conflict.
Rhinoceros poaching in southern Africa is the illegal act of slaughtering rhinoceros in the southern African countries of Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe and South Africa, where most of Africa's rhinos live. The most common reason for rhino poaching is to meet the high demand for their horns in Asian countries, where the horn is predominantly used in Traditional Chinese Medicine but is increasingly being used as a symbol of wealth and prosperity. In previous generations, the most common rhino poaching activity was hunting for recreational purposes. Because of excessive poaching, rhino populations have decline rapidly since the 1970s, leaving some species critically endangered and facing extinction.