WAR - International - Europe

WAR - International - Europe W.A.R - International
Wildlife At Risk - NGO registered in the Netherlands chamber of commerce. What WAR is NOT:
* We are NOT A CONSERVATION NGO AUDIT BODY.

About WAR

Wildlife At Risk International - NPO Registration number Dutch Chamber of commerce: KVK 57342725

WAR is a global coalition of reliable, knowledgeable and environmentally conscious individuals, groups and experts, who are convened for the sole purpose of :
- Ensuring man’s negative influence on our Wildlife Heritage is kept to a minimum
- Ensuring current and future generations will be

able to appreciate and understand that nature’s ‘balance’ must be protected and respected
- Recognizing that we have a vested interest in- and responsibility to our future with wildlife ! WAR positions itself at the forefront of the offensive against tradeable commodity, slaughter and ill-treatment of Wildlife under immediate threat of becoming extinct. WAR is in favour of:
- A global moratorium on hunting of wildlife species under threat of becoming extinct.
- An immediate census on the numbers of rhinos, elephants and lions currently under threat
- A National call for a State of Emergency and/or international intervention in areas where the safety measures have been compromised until the actual numbers of the various species are known and the poaching situation is under control.
- Legal horn treatments for rhino
- Stricter enforcement of laws and higher penalties for wildlife crimes

WAR is opposed to:
- Trade in wildlife body parts, as listed under the Cites convention regulations as well as of any other animal species that are under imminent threat of becoming extinct.
- Canned hunting- in any way, shape or form
- Farming of wild animals
- Dehorning rhinos- but as one means to help slow down poaching we accept the inevitable..all efforts need to be combined. We do not establish the credentials of other conservation NGOs, or make recommendations regarding their credibility one way or another. We accept as members, in good faith, all groups who wish to add their voices to the Wildlife At Risk anti-poaching cause, assuming they are already in good standing within the conservation community. We do not allow other organizations nor individuals' fundraising efforts on our Group.
* We are NOT A PETITION. Petitions are designed to tackle one issue or set of issues at a specific point in time, whereas we are a long-term lobby. We will encourage our members to sign petitions we identify as important and credible in our opinion. If members want to post other petitions this petition will have to be approved by us first. Maintaining our reputation:
While we do not act as auditors, WAR RESERVES THE RIGHT NOT TO ASSOCIATE with groups or individuals whose reputation has already been tarnished. This is to ensure that WAR’s own reputation remains intact. WAR office bearers should reflect this approach in their personal choices of association with other bodies or individuals, and take a united public stance on these issues in order to avoid any risk to WAR’s reputation or unity.Our simple philosophy is to steer clear of controversy and avoid, as much as possible, getting caught up in the intrigue and politicking sometimes visible in the conservation activism world. It saps our energy, which could be better spent elsewhere. We should focus on our mission, and ensure we keep our own house in order. IMPORTANT: Groups/organisations/reserves etc that want to join please contact us at [email protected]

WAR is a registered NPO at the Dutch Chamber of commerce: KVK 57342725
Website: www.war-international.org
Twitter: https://twitter.com/WildlifeAtRisk

There is a secure on-line donation option on our website:
http://war-international.org/donate.html


Alphabetical list of countries in Europe

A
Albania
Andorra
Armenia
Austria
Azerbaijan
B
Belarus
Belgium
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bulgaria
C
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
D
Denmark
E
Estonia
F
Finland
France
G
Georgia
Germany
Greece

H
Hungary
I
Iceland
Ireland
Italy
K
Kazakhstan
Kosovo
L
Latvia
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
M
Macedonia
Malta
Moldova
Monaco
Montenegro
N
Netherlands
Norway

P
Poland
Portugal
R
Romania
Russia
S
San Marino
Serbia
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
T
Turkey
U
Ukraine
United Kingdom (UK)
V
Vatican City (Holy See)

Spain moves to protect critically endangered European eel in Mar MenorTHE GOVERNMENT of Spain is stepping in to help pro...
06/02/2026

Spain moves to protect critically endangered European eel in Mar Menor

THE GOVERNMENT of Spain is stepping in to help protect one of the most fascinating – and endangered – creatures of the Mar Menor. The European eel, native to the waters of the Mar Menor lagoon, is a scientific curiosity for marine biologists and lovers of animals, but their population has been in a steady decline for years. For this reason, the government of Spain is preparing to label the animals as critically endangered and add them to the official list of Wild Species Under Special Protection.

https://euroweeklynews.com/2026/02/05/spain-moves-to-protect-critically-endangered-european-eel-in-mar-menor/

Belarus - Shunevich: First lynx hunting season ended in complete failure Ihar Shunevich, Chairman of the Belarusian Soci...
05/02/2026

Belarus - Shunevich: First lynx hunting season ended in complete failure

Ihar Shunevich, Chairman of the Belarusian Society of Hunters and Fishermen, called the first lynx hunting season in many years a failure. Out of 57 animals allowed for hunting, only six individuals were killed last season, or about 10.5%.

Ihar Shunevich, Chairman of the Belarusian Society of Hunters and Fishermen, called the first lynx hunting season in many years a failure. Out of 57 animals allowed for hunting, only six individuals were killed last season, or about 10.5%.

UK - Swan dead and another injured in catapult attackA swan has died and another has been injured after being shot by a ...
05/02/2026

UK - Swan dead and another injured in catapult attack

A swan has died and another has been injured after being shot by a catapult in what a wildlife charity has branded as "needlessly cruel".

The Windsor flock is already suffering from bird flu that the Swan Support rescue charity in Bray, Berkshire, said has killed more than 30 swans.

Wendy Hermon, group manager, said she received reports of a "bloodied swan" in Windsor on Tuesday morning.

Thames Valley Police confirmed it was investigating the catapult incidents and are encouraging anyone with information to contact them.

The Windsor flock is already suffering from bird flu that has killed 30 of the animals.

Cyprus - Rare gull colony in Cyprus faces decline as EU backs new protection planThe rocky islets off Cyprus’s Karpasia ...
04/02/2026

Cyprus - Rare gull colony in Cyprus faces decline as EU backs new protection plan

The rocky islets off Cyprus’s Karpasia peninsula have been designated a conservation priority under a new EU action plan for one of the Mediterranean’s rarest seabirds, as monitoring data shows the colony’s population is declining.

The European Union adopted the International Action Plan for Audouin’s gull in 2025, according to BirdLife Cyprus. BirdLife International and SPEA Portugal prepared the plan based on the latest scientific data.

The plan draws on evidence from 15 countries including Cyprus, mapping the bird’s distribution areas and the pressures it faces whilst setting targeted conservation priorities. One of those priorities is in Cyprus.

The Kleides islets at the northeastern tip of the Karpasia peninsula host the island’s only breeding colony of Audouin’s gulls, a site that BirdLife Cyprus described as vital not only for Cyprus’s seabirds but for conserving the species across the Mediterranean.

BirdLife Cyprus has collected systematic data from the Kleides since 2007 in cooperation with Turkish Cypriot organisation Kuşkor, contributing to knowledge about the species’ status, the organisation said.

Active nests and young birds are still recorded, but long-term trends show population decline, making protection of the colony more urgent than ever, according to BirdLife Cyprus.

The new plan transforms collective scientific knowledge into coordinated and targeted action, the organisation said. For Cyprus, it represents a critical tool for securing the Audouin’s gull’s future at the Kleides, which hosts the species’ easternmost breeding colony in the world, BirdLife Cyprus said.

BirdLife Cyprus reports population decline at Karpasia's rocky islets, the world's easternmost breeding colony for the rare Mediterranean gull.

UK - Hope for endangered bird after breeding successAn endangered wading bird has been breeding among peat bogs, a surve...
04/02/2026

UK - Hope for endangered bird after breeding success

An endangered wading bird has been breeding among peat bogs, a survey has discovered.

An RSPB survey found dunlin chicks - one of the UK's rarest wading birds - at High Helbeck Estate, near Brough, in the Cumbrian Pennines last year.

The RSPB said the starling-sized bird had an estimated 800 breeding pairs in the UK, with numbers declining since the 2000s, meaning it is on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List as near threatened.

Landowner Nicolete Blackett-Ord said the discovery was "particularly special" after working for years with the charity's senior conservation officer, Dr Elisabeth Charman, adding that the results were "extremely rewarding".

Surveyors at High Helbeck used traditional field methods, as well as motion cameras, recording devices and drones to identify the isolated areas where the birds were living across 14 areas between May and July.

The RSPB said its team was "delighted" to find breeding birds and get footage of dunlin chicks feeding in a bog pool.

Dunlin, one of the UK's rarest wading birds, is discovered breeding in peat bogs near Brough.

Svalbard’s polar bears are showing remarkable resilience to climate changeThese polar bears appear to be maintaining the...
02/02/2026

Svalbard’s polar bears are showing remarkable resilience to climate change

These polar bears appear to be maintaining their physical health despite the loss of sea ice—their preferred hunting grounds

Polar bears are the poster children of climate change—and for good reason. These giant bears hunt, mate and spend their days hanging out on Arctic sea ice, which is rapidly disappearing as the climate warms. But some polar bears, it seems, are far more resilient than we realized: new research suggests that in one region, the bears are adapting to the declining sea ice.

Researchers took more than 1,000 body measurements from 770 polar bears over 24 years around Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago in the Barents Sea—an area that has seen an especially acute decline in sea ice over the decades. By 2019, the region’s annual sea ice season shriveled to more than two months shorter than what it was 24 years prior.

Yet the bears showed no decline in their body condition between 2000 and 2019—even as sea ice in their area disappeared. The findings were published on Thursday in the journal Scientific Reports.

That flew in the face of what Jon Aars, a senior researcher at the Norwegian Polar Institute and lead author of the paper, and his team expected. They hypothesized that the Svalbard polar bears’ health would wane over the study period. Tracking each bear over the ice with helicopters and periodically darting them to take body measurements on the ground, the researchers were able to estimate the animals’ overall physical health—a metric called body condition index, or BCI.

To Aars’s surprise, the polar bears were in “fairly good” condition, even recovering from a drop in BCI from the 1990s to 2000—the opposite of what he and his team had anticipated.

That’s not to say the bears were totally unaffected by the loss of sea ice; some had relocated den areas or shifted their habitats north to follow the receding ice, Aars says. And of course, it’s hard to know whether the polar bears would be in even better condition if it weren’t for climate change.

While what the team observed on Svalbard may be “useful” for studying other areas with similar ecosystems, Aars cautions that the findings don’t mean that all the tens of thousands of polar bears across the Arctic are in equally good shape.

Still, what gives? Why are the Svalbard bears doing so well? Aars and his colleagues aren’t sure, but they think it may have something to do with changes in the polar bears’ diet. It could be that, with less ice, seals “aggregate” on the ice that remains and are thus easier to hunt or that the bears are relying more on walrus carcasses or reindeer for food.

These polar bears appear to be maintaining their physical health despite the loss of sea ice—their preferred hunting grounds

UK - King Charles accused of hypocrisy after 12 foxes 'strung up like trophies' on his landThe grim discovery made in ­c...
02/02/2026

UK - King Charles accused of hypocrisy after 12 foxes 'strung up like trophies' on his land

The grim discovery made in ­countryside owned by the monarch near Penicuik ­comes as Charles claims to be at one with nature in a new documentary.

King Charles has been accused of hypocrisy after 12 foxes were “shot and strung up like trophies” on Crown Estate land, we can reveal.

The grim discovery in ­countryside owned by the monarch, near Penicuik, ­Midlothian, sparked a police probe and comes as Charles claims to be at one with the natural world in a documentary out this week.

Campaigners have written to the King urging him to intervene after images obtained by the Sunday Mail showed the slaughtered animals, with some of the bloody carcasses draped over a fence near a publicly accessible path.

A member of the public came across the scene on the boundary of a tenanted farm owned by Crown Estate Scotland on January 3 and ­notified police.

The slaughter comes as a new Prime Video film, Finding Harmony: A King’s Vision, will tout the monarch as a lifelong champion of nature.

The grim discovery made in ­countryside owned by the monarch near Penicuik ­comes as Charles claims to be at one with nature in a new documentary.

Greece - Pack Of Five Wolves Spotted in Thessaloniki SuburbsA pack of five wolves that has been spotted near the Panoram...
28/01/2026

Greece - Pack Of Five Wolves Spotted in Thessaloniki Suburbs

A pack of five wolves that has been spotted near the Panorama and Thermi suburbs of Thessaloniki does not pose a threat to humans, wildlife organization Kallisto said on Tuesday.

The NGO said monitoring data shows that the wolves move mainly through sparsely populated areas and actively avoid contact with people. Kallisto added that ongoing repelling efforts aim to discourage the animals from approaching residential zones.

The organization advised residents to follow basic safety measures, including securing waste bins and removing food sources that could attract wildlife to urban areas.

According to Kallisto, the wolves’ presence near the suburbs may relate to increased wild boar populations or the availability of other food sources in the wider area.

Since November 2025, Kallisto has coordinated with the Thessaloniki Forestry Department, local authorities, and the municipality of Pylaia-Chortiatis under the EU-funded LIFE Wild Wolf program to monitor and manage the pack. Authorities have already carried out three repelling operations to prevent the wolves from moving closer to inhabited areas.

A pack of five wolves that has been spotted near the Panorama and Thermi suburbs of Thessaloniki does not pose a threat to humans, wildlife organization Kallisto said on Tuesday. The NGO said monitoring data shows that the wolves move mainly through sparsely populated areas and actively avoid contac...

Romania to fund installation of electric fences in bid to curb human–bear conflictsRomania will install “thousands of ki...
26/01/2026

Romania to fund installation of electric fences in bid to curb human–bear conflicts

Romania will install “thousands of kilometres of electric fencing” under a new programme run by the Environmental Fund Administration (AFM), with total funding of RON 24.28 million, the Ministry of Environment announced. The initiative is aimed at preventing conflicts between people and wildlife, particularly in communities where incidents involving brown bears are frequent.

According to the ministry, the programme focuses on prevention rather than intervention, with electric fences designed to reduce the risk of attacks and damage without harming animals or altering their natural behaviour.

“This programme is a preventive tool, as our goal is to reduce situations in which people come into conflict with wild animals, especially in communities where incidents involving brown bears are frequent,” said environment minister Diana Buzoianu.

“Electric fences significantly reduce the risk of attacks and damage, without injuring the animals or altering their natural behaviour. They protect households, apiaries, and agricultural holdings, as well as the animals’ natural movement routes. Field data clearly shows that where prevention is in place, conflicts decrease,” she added.

Romania will install “thousands of kilometres of electric fencing” under a new programme run by the Environmental Fund Administration (AFM), with total funding of RON 24.28 million, the Ministry of Environment announced. The initiative is aimed at preventing conflicts between people and...

Switzerland - Customs investigation uncovers international bird smugglingCustoms investigators have uncovered a trade in...
07/01/2026

Switzerland - Customs investigation uncovers international bird smuggling

Customs investigators have uncovered a trade in protected birds between Switzerland and several European countries. According to the Federal Office for Customs and Border Security, dozens of animals have been illegally imported since 2024.

The starting point of the investigation was the inspection of two Portuguese nationals at the Great St. Bernard Tunnel border crossing in November 2024, as reported by the Federal Office for Customs and Border Security (FOCBS) on Wednesday. The two men, aged 54 and 46, had not declared around ten protected birds.

Further investigations revealed that a third man was involved in trafficking between Switzerland, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg and Portugal. The three people used the premises of their company to store the birds.

According to the FOCA, they are said to have illegally imported a total of more than fifty birds with forged purchase receipts and without the necessary certificates. The value of the goods amounts to almost one hundred thousand francs.

Following the initial investigation, the 2025 customs investigation carried out a further inspection in western Switzerland and Ticino. Around thirty more protected birds were confiscated.

The three perpetrators from the 2024 case were charged with violations of customs, VAT, species protection and animal welfare legislation. The 2025 inspections also led to the opening of several new investigations in various cantons in western Switzerland, it was reported.

Customs investigators have uncovered a trade in protected birds between Switzerland and several European countries. According to the Federal Office for Customs and Border Security, dozens of animals have been illegally imported since 2024.

UK - Lynx could be reintroduced to Scotland as public given their sayPeople in the Highlands and Moray are being invited...
06/01/2026

UK - Lynx could be reintroduced to Scotland as public given their say

People in the Highlands and Moray are being invited to have their say on the reintroduction of lynx

Plans for the potential reintroduction of lynx to the Highlands will be put to some 89,000 households after a consultation was launched.

A series of more than 40 public engagement events are planned to take place in the Highlands and Moray from January 26 as a group of rewilding charities bid to find out what people think.

The charities say that reintroducing the wild felines could bring significant benefits to the region but a licence would be required from the government agency NatureScot before any scheme could go ahead.

However, the Scottish Government has said it does not intend to allow the reintroduction of lynx or other “large carnivores” in the foreseeable future.

The Lynx to Scotland partnership has been assessing how a potential reintroduction scheme could work since 2020.

They say the region could support up to 250 lynx, which would pose no threat to people and prey on deer.

Steve Micklewright, chief executive of the charity Trees for Life, said: “Northern Scotland can support a thriving population of lynx, but social acceptance is just as important – so, we are exploring in detail how people feel about bringing back this important missing native species.”

The charity was involved in reintroducing beavers to the Highlands in November and wants to carry out similar schemes for red squirrels and a breed of cattle called the tauros.

Any reintroduction of lynx would begin with about 20 of the cats, before numbers are increased.

Lynx were native to the area but driven to extinction several hundred years ago.

People in the Highlands and Moray are being invited to have their say on the reintroduction of lynx

How demand for elite falcons in the Middle East is driving illegal trade of British birdsData reveals hundreds of UK nes...
06/01/2026

How demand for elite falcons in the Middle East is driving illegal trade of British birds

Data reveals hundreds of UK nests have been raided in the past decade amid growing appetite to own prized birds for racing and breeding

In the echoing exhibition halls of Abu Dhabi’s International Hunting and Equestrian Exhibition, hundreds of falcons sit on perches under bright lights. Decorated hoods fit snugly over their heads, blocking their vision to keep them calm.

In a small glass room marked Elite Falcons Hall, four young birds belonging to an undisclosed Emirati sheikh are displayed like expensive jewels. Entry to the room, with its polished glass, controlled lighting and plush seating, is restricted to authorised visitors only.

These falcons are granted Emirati passports, jet around the world and have entire hospitals that specialise in their healthcare. Some cost more than luxury cars – an American falcon at the exhibition will sell for AED 350,000 (£71,000). The most prestigious birds travel in Range Rovers and Bentleys fitted out with a perch between the front seats.

For thousands of years, people have hunted using falcons over the vast Arabian desert. In the UAE, however, this Bedouin tradition has evolved into a spectacle of wealth and prestige to meet the tastes of the modern Gulf elite. As falconry has become a multimillion-dollar international industry that stretches around the world, an investigation by the Guardian and Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism (ARIJ) shows that it is fed by a shadow industry of the smuggling and illegal capture of wild birds.

Exclusive: data reveals hundreds of UK nests have been raided in the past decade amid growing appetite to own prized birds for racing and breeding

Adres

Wethouder Woerdelsstraat 2
Amsterdam

Meldingen

Wees de eerste die het weet en laat ons u een e-mail sturen wanneer WAR - International - Europe nieuws en promoties plaatst. Uw e-mailadres wordt niet voor andere doeleinden gebruikt en u kunt zich op elk gewenst moment afmelden.

Contact De Organisatie

Stuur een bericht naar WAR - International - Europe:

Delen