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Nick Carter

1997 Goldman Prize Winner

Nick Carter

Wildlife Protection
Africa
Zambia

Using sparse resources, Nick Carter (d. 2000) brought together six African countries to create the world’s first multinational enforcement body to fight rampant illegal wildlife trafficking.

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Meet Nick Carter

Using sparse resources, Nick Carter (d. 2000) brought together six African countries to create the world’s first multinational enforcement body to fight rampant illegal wildlife trafficking.

A multi-billion dollar industry, the worldwide illegal trade in protected species is the most profitable form of organized crime after arms and drug trafficking. Poachers and dealers in endangered species have historically been protected once they cross borders. Few are caught and extradition is often difficult.

Nick Carter was the first person in the world to document and expose large-scale pirate whaling and then spent years exposing wildlife crime in Asia, Central and South America, Africa, and Europe. He found that a failure in cooperation among national agencies often resulted in the ineffective enforcement of wildlife laws. This was particularly true in Africa.

In 1992 Carter, working closely with Zambia’s Minister of Tourism, took the lead in organizing Africa’s first wildlife law enforcement officer’s conference. Meeting in Lusaka, Zambia, the group of eight nations unanimously recommended forming an African inter-governmental task force to fight wildlife crime. Carter then overcame political inertia, antagonism and meager resources to continue working on the agreement with legal advisors from United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) and the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).

In September 1994 leaders of six African governments—Kenya, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia—met at a ceremony opened by the president of Zambia to sign the “Lusaka Agreement.” Four nations have since taken the next step and ratified the agreement. Congo, Ethiopia and Lesotho have also agreed to sign, and each participating country has established a national enforcement bureau.

Carter’s efforts came to fruition on December 10, 1996 when under the Lusaka Agreement, the world’s first multinational wildlife enforcement body to fight wildlife crime, came into force. Since then training programs for national law enforcement officers have been held in Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Ethiopia.