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India asks UN wildlife body to not curb its animal imports amid Ambani zoo furore

13 Nov 2025, 1:46 AM
India asks UN wildlife body to not curb its animal imports amid Ambani zoo furore

NEW DELHI, Nov 13 — India has urged a UN wildlife trade body not to curb its imports of endangered species, saying it has tightened oversight amid growing allegations of irregular animal shipments to a large private zoo run by Asia's richest family.

Vantara, a 3,500-acre zoo in Gujarat state run by the philanthropic arm of a conglomerate led by billionaire Mukesh Ambani and his family, has faced allegations of improper imports of certain animals, triggering higher scrutiny from authorities in Germany and the European Union, Reuters has reported.

Indian investigators tasked by the country's Supreme Court to examine the allegations by non-profit and wildlife groups cleared the sanctuary of any wrongdoing in September, and Vantara has said it complies with all regulations.

However, after visiting the facility in September, the Secretariat of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) issued a report last week asking India to review its procedures.

The report cited discrepancies between exporter and importer trade data and flagged insufficient checks on the origin of some animals.

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Anant Ambani, son of Indian billionaire Mukesh Ambani, pose for a photograph at the Vantara animal rescue centre in Jamnagar, Gujarat, India, on March 4, 2025.

CITES is a global treaty that regulates trade in endangered plants and animals, or products derived from them, with the aim of ensuring their survival.

While CITES acknowledged last week that Vantara operates facilities of “exceptionally high standards,” it recommended that India halt new import permits for endangered species until safeguards are tightened. The body warned that without stricter checks, animals sourced from the wild could be misrepresented as captive-bred.

India countered that it "has strengthened inspection and reporting mechanisms for all recognized zoos and rescue facilities" including Vantara. The government also instructed the Central Zoo Authority to ensure enhanced due diligence for all future acquisitions.

Animals from the world over

Vantara says it is home to some 2,000 species. That includes imported exotic species from South Africa, Venezuela, and Democratic Republic of Congo, including snakes, tortoises, tigers, cheetahs, giraffes and chimpanzees.

The shipments were recorded with a declared value of US$9 million (RM 39 million), which Vantara has said reflected freight and insurance charges, not any payments for wildlife.

The CITES report last week noted that "a number of animals come from established commercial breeding facilities, which would normally sell the animals they breed".

India has mounted a defence, saying in response that the Supreme Court panel's findings showed imports were carried out in compliance with regulations.

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi interacts with an elusive golden Bengal tiger at Vantara in Gujarat, India, in this handout picture released on March 4, 2025.

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