Recent national coordination between the Ministry of Public Security and the Ministry of Agriculture and Environment has produced encouraging results. All 34 provinces and cities have adopted wildlife protection action plans, while nearly all have established local steering committees. Authorities and partner organizations have secured thousands of compliance commitments from households and businesses, encouraged voluntary surrender of wildlife, and handled more than 1,700 violations related to wildlife and aquatic resource protection. These actions demonstrate a growing national commitment to biodiversity protection and ecosystem restoration.
However, major challenges persist. Vietnam’s Red Data Book lists hundreds of threatened species, and several native animals remain among the world’s most endangered. Illegal wildlife crime is increasingly sophisticated, driven by lucrative black markets, online commerce, cross-border trafficking, and entrenched misconceptions about wildlife-derived medicine or status consumption. Demand remains one of the most powerful drivers of exploitation.
A particularly damaging factor is misinformation. False beliefs that products such as pangolin scales, rhino horn, tiger bone, or primate organs offer medicinal or health benefits continue to sustain illegal markets despite scientific evidence disproving many of these claims. Conservation experts working in rescue centers emphasize that each rescued animal often represents a chain of suffering linked to poaching, captivity, or trafficking fueled by these misconceptions.
Local implementation gaps also weaken national protection goals. In many areas, enforcement remains inconsistent, inspections are limited, and some violations receive only administrative penalties rather than stronger criminal consequences. Rural geography, limited local capacity, and low public awareness can make surveillance difficult, while inexpensive hunting tools and nighttime operations further complicate prevention.
To address these weaknesses, experts increasingly advocate for a more synchronized strategy. This includes stricter and more consistent inspections of bird markets, restaurants, transport routes, breeding facilities, and release points; stronger legal guidance that simplifies criminal prosecution for protected species violations; broader substitution campaigns promoting herbal alternatives to wildlife products; and expanded education, especially in forest-edge and coastal communities where wildlife exploitation pressures are often greatest.
Public communication is especially crucial. Long-term conservation depends not only on law enforcement but also on transforming consumer behavior. When people stop buying wildlife products, the profit motive that drives illegal hunting weakens substantially.
Community participation must also expand. Households, restaurants, traders, and agricultural collection points all play roles in either enabling or preventing illegal trade. Signed commitments, visible prosecutions, and publicized penalties can strengthen deterrence.
Ultimately, wildlife protection is about more than saving individual species—it is about preserving ecosystems, cultural responsibility, and environmental security for future generations.
Vietnam’s progress shows that conservation is possible, but the path ahead requires moving beyond fragmented efforts toward unified national action. Protecting wildlife cannot be the responsibility of authorities alone; it requires shared commitment from government, science, communities, and consumers alike.
Only when legal enforcement, public understanding, and ethical responsibility work together can Vietnam truly secure its extraordinary natural heritage from exploitation and loss. |