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Tigers could be extinct within 12 years: WWF

Thu Oct 21, 12:07 pm ET

STOCKHOLM (AFP) Tigers could become extinct within 12 years but a top level

meeting in Russia next month could help reverse the decline, nature

conservation body WWF said on Thursday.

"The worse scenario is that the tiger could be gone when the next year of the

tiger comes along, in 12 years," said Ola Jennersten, head of the international

nature conservation programme at WWF Sweden.

The organisation is leading a global campaign to attempt to double the number

of tigers by 2022, when the next Chinese calendar year of the tiger comes

around.

WWF said that in the last century, illegal hunting, a shrinking habitat and the

trade of tiger parts used in oriental medicine had sent the number of the big

cats worldwide plunging 97 percent to around just 3,200 tigers today.

"Despite the gloomy figures, the situation is more hopeful than ever,"

Jennersten said, praising a political initiative of 13 'tiger states' and

different bodies set to meet in Russia on November 21-24 in a bid to halt

possible extinction of the species.

"This will be achieved through increased political involvement, focus on the

tiger landscapes that have the greatest chance of long term retention of the

tiger, and increased control of tiger trade," he said.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who in the past years has made a big

show of his love for nature, publicly kissing animals and engaging in a string

of stunts involving wildlife including tigers, is expected to attend the summit

in Saint Petersburg.

WWF said some 1,800 tigers live in India, Nepal, Bhutan and Bangladesh, 450

live in Sumatra, 400 in Malaysia, 350 are spread throughout southeast Asia and

around 450 live in the wild in Russia.