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Five-Year sentence for selling Parrots
Published on: 2017-05-10
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051A Shenzhen factory worker serving a five-year prison sentence for selling a type of parrot protected by an international endangered-species law is appealing his punishment as too tough - and he's getting plenty of public support.


Wang Peng's troubles date back to April 2014, when a friend gave him a male pet parrot. Wang later bought a female parrot, hoping they would mate, said Wang's wife, Ren Panpan.


The pair produced more than 50 baby parrots in a year and her husband sold six of the offspring to another friend for 3,000 yuan, Ren said.


In May 2016, Wang, 32, was arrested and charged with the illicit sale of rare and endangered species. In late March, he was sentenced to five years in prison by Shenzhen's Baoan District People's Court.


The court said that Wang's parrots, though home-bred, were protected under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, a multilateral treaty that protects endangered animals and plants.

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Not all parrots are protected as endangered species. But the variety of parrots that Wang had were designated as endangered, the court said.


The case illustrates the tightrope that authorities in China often find themselves walking as they try to balance protecting animals and the ecosystem while at the same time fighting animal poaching and severe environmental degradation.


In a statement released on Monday, Wang's two attorneys, Xu Xin and Si Weijiang, said that the public backlash raises questions about whether the court handled the case in accordance with the law and also whether its judges are in touch with community sentiment.


Others disagree, saying the court verdict is justified. Wang couldn't have bred parrots without knowing the species and habitus of the female parrot he bought, said an employee of TRAFFIC, a non-governmental organization specializing in wildlife trade.


The activist also raised doubts that two parrots could have produced 50 babies in a year, especially resulting in three different parrot species. Wang could have bought some of the baby parrots elsewhere illicitly to make money, the activist said.

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