The Prague Post - The watchers who prey on Israel's falcon poachers

EUR -
AED 4.151031
AFN 80.247598
ALL 98.522497
AMD 440.676983
ANG 2.03683
AOA 1036.333768
ARS 1324.545246
AUD 1.753235
AWG 2.034242
AZN 1.925715
BAM 1.955254
BBD 2.287261
BDT 137.631579
BGN 1.955254
BHD 0.427081
BIF 3369.55937
BMD 1.130135
BND 1.46989
BOB 7.827815
BRL 6.392724
BSD 1.132784
BTN 95.735275
BWP 15.423694
BYN 3.707265
BYR 22150.636537
BZD 2.275465
CAD 1.562355
CDF 3244.616608
CHF 0.934145
CLF 0.027864
CLP 1073.13043
CNY 8.217891
CNH 8.149807
COP 4824.153313
CRC 572.840089
CUC 1.130135
CUP 29.948565
CVE 110.234228
CZK 24.915515
DJF 201.723688
DKK 7.46443
DOP 66.531427
DZD 149.637228
EGP 57.340993
ERN 16.952018
ETB 151.585884
FJD 2.549475
FKP 0.850941
GBP 0.85139
GEL 3.09701
GGP 0.850941
GHS 15.915557
GIP 0.850941
GMD 80.80897
GNF 9812.260857
GTQ 8.724564
GYD 237.693647
HKD 8.759451
HNL 29.418788
HRK 7.535063
HTG 147.848727
HUF 404.554691
IDR 18609.868588
ILS 4.054588
IMP 0.850941
INR 95.52632
IQD 1483.985738
IRR 47592.794167
ISK 146.13813
JEP 0.850941
JMD 179.679841
JOD 0.801496
JPY 163.796616
KES 146.529096
KGS 98.830698
KHR 4538.73299
KMF 491.047735
KPW 1017.036387
KRW 1582.079593
KWD 0.346545
KYD 0.944036
KZT 585.226631
LAK 24496.161771
LBP 101499.66585
LKR 339.215306
LRD 226.566753
LSL 20.853079
LTL 3.336994
LVL 0.683608
LYD 6.185273
MAD 10.503968
MDL 19.484561
MGA 5144.563869
MKD 61.512828
MMK 2372.392072
MNT 4038.466774
MOP 9.044175
MRU 45.120404
MUR 51.229425
MVR 17.4158
MWK 1964.251669
MXN 22.128603
MYR 4.816073
MZN 72.328998
NAD 20.853079
NGN 1812.408452
NIO 41.688362
NOK 11.772164
NPR 153.17624
NZD 1.900824
OMR 0.435145
PAB 1.132784
PEN 4.153141
PGK 4.696689
PHP 62.73419
PKR 318.31924
PLN 4.277518
PYG 9063.469886
QAR 4.133846
RON 4.978925
RSD 117.167292
RUB 93.46101
RWF 1598.853672
SAR 4.238098
SBD 9.425806
SCR 16.068296
SDG 678.649932
SEK 10.911001
SGD 1.46884
SHP 0.888108
SLE 25.756185
SLL 23698.337407
SOS 647.41927
SRD 41.617247
STD 23391.502773
SVC 9.912233
SYP 14692.920352
SZL 20.844181
THB 37.390543
TJS 11.724527
TMT 3.955471
TND 3.398551
TOP 2.646892
TRY 43.467012
TTD 7.681856
TWD 34.716946
TZS 3050.648396
UAH 47.296997
UGX 4149.841551
USD 1.130135
UYU 47.53673
UZS 14612.920729
VES 98.025574
VND 29389.148119
VUV 136.913075
WST 3.1399
XAF 655.773937
XAG 0.035286
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.054245
XDR 0.815572
XOF 655.773937
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.48782
ZAR 20.787473
ZMK 10172.570869
ZMW 31.441223
ZWL 363.902853
  • RBGPF

    67.2100

    67.21

    +100%

  • SCS

    0.2700

    10.14

    +2.66%

  • RYCEF

    0.1300

    10.35

    +1.26%

  • GSK

    0.3200

    39.07

    +0.82%

  • VOD

    -0.1200

    9.61

    -1.25%

  • RELX

    0.9400

    55.02

    +1.71%

  • NGG

    0.0300

    71.68

    +0.04%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    22.1

    +0.32%

  • RIO

    1.1500

    59.7

    +1.93%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    43.17

    -0.3%

  • AZN

    1.9300

    72.44

    +2.66%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.07

    +0.46%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    22.32

    +0.27%

  • BCE

    0.0100

    21.45

    +0.05%

  • BCC

    3.4400

    96.15

    +3.58%

  • BP

    0.2400

    28.12

    +0.85%

The watchers who prey on Israel's falcon poachers
The watchers who prey on Israel's falcon poachers / Photo: Menahem Kahana - AFP

The watchers who prey on Israel's falcon poachers

For the volunteer watchers scanning southern Israel's wheatfields, protecting migratory falcons from poachers is a highly coordinated security operation.

Text size:

The raptors may top the food chain in the wild, but here the predators can themselves become the prey.

Many protected species of migratory birds spend their winters in this agricultural area close to the Gaza Strip.

And some species are big business. A single falcon can fetch up to tens of thousands of dollars on the black market, especially in Gulf countries where falconry is a treasured tradition.

Meidad Goren, director of the Ramat Hanegev Birding Center, told AFP that poaching has soared in recent years.

Falcons are captured alive by Bedouin Arabs living in Israel's Negev desert to be domesticated or smuggled to neighbouring countries, he said.

Using binoculars to observe one bird perched on a nearby pylon, Goren noted: "It has a ring. It's a peregrine falcon that was captured and escaped."

The raptors feed on small birds attracted to the wheat, waiting motionless and watching from power lines that cross the fields.

The number of cases of birds of prey, especially falcons, found with ties around their legs, sometimes tangled in power lines, led Goren to set up groups of volunteer watchers.

The area is also patrolled by rangers from the Israel Nature and Parks Authority.

- 'Like watching a child' -

This winter, a saker falcon took up residence around Kibbutz Urim.

The saker falcon is an endangered species popular with falconers in eastern Europe, Central Asia and Arab states.

After observing several attempts by poachers to capture the bird, Goren put in place what he calls a "special surveillance system".

"Dozens of people, ornithologists, nature lovers, retirees, guides, farmers," responded to his appeal for help to reinforce regular volunteer patrols, said Goren.

His centre operates under both the Israel Nature and Parks Authority and the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel.

Mirit Keshales is 47 and a regular "falcon guardian" volunteer.

"It's really like watching a child, a very methodical organisation with a well-defined schedule... we make sure someone is always there during the day," she said.

The poachers come mostly from Bedouin villages, said Ofir Bruckenstein, a ranger with the Israel Nature and Parks Authority.

"For them, hunting with falcons and owning falcons are cultural practices rooted in their traditions," he said.

"Owning a falcon and displaying it in their living space is a symbol of status and prestige."

- Sold for $19,000 -

Bruckenstein criticised what he called lenient penalties for poaching, in particular of falcons, saying fines were of "a few thousand shekels", even if repeat offenders faced jail terms.

The especially lucrative black market for falcons smuggled via Jordan and Egypt to the Gulf encourages the illegal trade, he added.

"Saker falcons and peregrine falcons are easily sold for 50,000 or 70,000 shekels ($14,000 to $19,000)," he said.

Falconry is inscribed on UNESCO's list of Intangible Cultural Heritage, and is hugely popular in the Gulf.

In the United Arab Emirates, passports for falcons were introduced in 2002 in an effort to combat smuggling, and tens of thousands have since been issued.

But poaching remains a regional problem in the Middle East, and the demand for falcons captured from the wild has exploded in recent years, with the growth in clubs which stage contests for beauty and falconry.

While falcons are farmed, especially in the UAE which permits only captive-bred and registered birds to be used in sport falconry, wild falcons are considered better hunters and are thus more desirable.

"They lack falcons because those that arrive (in the Gulf region) in winter have nearly all been caught. That's why they are now trying to capture them elsewhere," said Goren.

AFP contacted several international falconry organisations based in Europe, but they declined to comment on the illegal trade to Gulf countries, citing the "sensitivity of the issue".

Meanwhile, the watchers in southern Israel do what they can to prevent more of these beautiful birds from falling into human hands.

J.Simacek--TPP