Illegal Furs On Durbar Marg
A walk last December through downtown Kathmandu´s Durbar Marg avenue was shocking to me, as someone concerned about endangered of Himalayan wildlife. The ubiquitous fur-selling shops all seemed to carry garments made out of spotted cats. Eager salesmen told me what they thought I wanted to hear: "jungle cat", "ocelot", "leopard", anything. They said they would help me smuggle the fur out of the country. A Kashmiri shopkeeper operating at Store Number 11 near the Yak and Yeti Hotel offered me a snow leopard coat for USD 3,000.
Compelled by a need to know more, I initiated a brief study of Kathmandu´s fur market. I visited 36 fur-selling shops with a female companion (in picture with face obscured) and together we posed as a couple interested in some illegal fur shopping. We found that 86 percent of the stores carried coals made from protected species: leopard-cat (Prionailurus bengalensis), common leopard (Panthera pardus), clouded leopard (Neofelis nebulosa), and snow leopard (Panthera uncia).