A video showing protected animals being butchered and sold at an outdoor market in northeastern India has led to arrests and raised questions about why such crimes continue in plain sight.
What happened?
As Northeast Now reported, police in Assam's Udalguri district detained five people after a video spread online showing vendors hawking meat from Bengal monitor lizards, civets, and Indian foxes at the Puthimari weekly market.
Officers recovered a burned fox carcass from the suspects, who were arrested on accusations of killing the animal and trying to peddle its meat.
The market operates within territory managed by the Dhansiri Forest Division, yet locals say this trafficking has gone on without interference for a long time.
"This is not happening in some remote forest corner," one area conservationist told the outlet. "It's a weekly market. Everyone knows, except apparently the Forest Department."
Why is illegal wildlife trade concerning?
Wildlife trafficking is one of the world's most profitable criminal enterprises. It earns an estimated $23 billion annually, according to the World Economic Forum, while pushing countless species toward extinction.
Get cost-effective air conditioning in less than an hour without expensive electrical work![]() The Merino Mono is a heating and cooling system designed for the rooms traditional HVAC can't reach. The streamlined design eliminates clunky outdoor units, installs in under an hour, and plugs into a standard 120V outlet — no expensive electrical upgrades required. And while a traditional “mini-split” system can get pricey fast, the Merino Mono comes with a flat-rate price — with hardware and professional installation included. |
When animals like civets and monitor lizards disappear from their habitats, the effects ripple outward. These creatures control insect and rodent populations, disperse seeds, and maintain the balance that healthy ecosystems need to function.
For communities, losing biodiversity means losing natural pest control, pollination services, and food sources that people have depended on for generations. This illegal trade also creates pathways for diseases to jump from animals to humans.
What can I do to help stop illegal wildlife trade?
If you encounter suspicious wildlife products online or in person, report them to local authorities or organizations like TRAFFIC, which monitors the global trade.
Before you travel, research what souvenirs to avoid. Products made from ivory, exotic skins, and animal parts fuel the demand that keeps poachers in business.
|
What's the most you'd pay per month to put solar panels on your roof if there was no down payment?
Click your choice to see results and speak your mind. |
You can also support conservation groups working on the ground in trafficking hotspots. Even small donations help fund anti-poaching patrols and community education programs.
Meanwhile, public awareness puts pressure on governments to enforce existing protections and hold negligent officials accountable.
Get TCD's free newsletters for easy tips to save more, waste less, and make smarter choices — and earn up to $5,000 toward clean upgrades in TCD's exclusive Rewards Club.








