Cheetah Trafficking Endangers Species Survival

The Hidden Crisis of Cheetah Trafficking

For decades, some individuals have kept big cats like cheetahs and panthers as exotic pets, attempting to tame them. While the United States has implemented strict regulations to curb this practice, the illegal trade of these animals continues to thrive in other parts of the world. In Somaliland, a recent incident highlighted the grim reality of this trade when wildlife officials discovered several starving cheetah cubs inside a crate. These cubs were among many that have been stolen from the wild, smuggled across borders, and sold into an underground market. This is part of a larger pattern of wildlife trafficking that supplies wealthy buyers with exotic pets, putting the cheetah population at serious risk.

According to conservation experts, only around 6,500 adult cheetahs remain in the wild, occupying just 9% of their historic range. The illegal pet trade is one of the biggest threats to the species' survival, as they are classified as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. For a species built for speed and survival, human greed has become an opponent it cannot outrun.

Cheetah Trafficking: How Widespread Is It?

Dr. Laurie Marker, founder and executive director of the Cheetah Conservation Fund (CCF), explains that cheetah trafficking is mainly concentrated in the Horn of Africa, particularly in areas like Somaliland, Puntland, and northern Ethiopia. "This year alone, we have received 30 cubs that were confiscated from the illegal wildlife pet trade," she said. "In earlier years, we were seeing over 200 cubs being trafficked per year."

The CCF has been working in Somaliland since 2017, establishing safe houses to care for rescued cubs. "We set up our Cheetah Conservation Fund Cheetah Rescue and Conservation Centre on 300 hectares with large, natural facilities for the rescued cubs," she added. "We moved to the Centre in 2023, and today we have over 125 cubs and cheetahs at the Center."

Cubs taken from the wild are often smuggled through Somaliland and shipped across the Gulf of Aden to Yemen, where they are transported into wealthy markets in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates. "Sadly, we are seeing trafficked cubs going to other areas as well now, including Pakistan and reports in the Far East," Marker noted.

By CCF’s estimates, roughly 20 percent of the region’s cheetahs are now caught up in trafficking networks, a level that Marker warns "isn’t sustainable."

How Cheetahs Are Captured and Smuggled

The process of capturing cheetah cubs is as cruel as it is effective. "Cubs are often caught quite young in the den," explained Marker. "Cubs don’t start following their mother until after six weeks. It’s been stated that pastoral herders follow the female cheetahs and steal the cubs or will kill the mother and steal the cubs."

Once taken, the cubs are stuffed into sacks or repurposed plastic jugs with small air holes. "When possible, they bundle several litters together to try to sell," she said. Many cubs never survive the journey. "For every one cub that makes it, four to five die en route. The cubs come to us with severe malnutrition, and many die at our feet as they arrive. The cubs aren’t given proper food; it’s horrible."

Their journey follows the same routes used by smugglers trafficking other illegal goods, from weapons to people. The traffickers are organized, mobile, and ruthless; to them, the cubs are merely another commodity.

The Cost of Being a Status Symbol

Once in the hands of buyers, cheetah cubs are marketed as luxury pets and social-media trophies. "Yes, it’s mainly the exotic-pet market," Marker confirmed. "The traffickers often are dealing in other items, including guns and people."

In some parts of the Gulf region, a cheetah is a status symbol: an animal to be paraded, photographed, and displayed. But few buyers understand how fragile cheetahs are in captivity. "The cubs…are not given proper facilities to live, very small cages and no exercise."

Cheetahs also breed poorly in captivity. As the international cheetah studbook keeper, Marker oversees global records of the species in zoos and sanctuaries. "Today there are about 1,800 cheetahs registered in captivity in 45 countries and about 365 facilities," she explained. "Last year only about 150 cubs were born in very few facilities worldwide."

Even under expert care, reproduction is rare. In private homes or improvised enclosures, it’s almost impossible. That means every cub stolen from the wild further diminishes the species’ already fragile gene pool.

The Internet’s New Role in Wildlife Crime

Wildlife trafficking has always thrived in the shadows, but now much of it unfolds in plain sight: on social media. A 2024 report by a global wildlife trade monitoring organization documented how the live cheetah trade has moved online. Over six months, researchers identified 222 unique URLs linked to cheetah sales, and nearly 70 percent of those listings appeared on social-media platforms.

Almost half of the posts—44 percent—explicitly offered live cheetahs for sale. The majority originated from accounts in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, South Africa, and the United States. Many of these posts also included other exotic species; in fact, 64 percent advertised multiple types of wildlife.

For traffickers, digital platforms have made the illegal pet trade easier than ever to access. Hashtags, encrypted messages, and private groups allow sellers to reach wealthy buyers directly, often under the guise of “animal lovers” or “conservationists.” What appears to be an innocent photo of a cub lounging beside a sports car is often actually an advertisement for a live, endangered animal.

Fighting Back

Despite the enormity of the problem, there are reasons for hope. Beyond rescue work, CCF is partnering with local governments to improve law enforcement, strengthen wildlife laws, and train customs officials. The organization also works directly with herders and pastoral communities to reduce cub theft by promoting coexistence with predators.

CCF’s teams now monitor social-media activity as well, flagging and documenting online trafficking networks in collaboration with global partners. By combining on-the-ground intervention with digital investigation, Marker hopes to tackle both the supply and demand sides of the trade.

A Global Responsibility

Cheetah trafficking might seem like a distant issue, but its roots reach everywhere. It’s fueled by online visibility, international wealth, and global indifference. The same platforms where we scroll for entertainment are being used to sell endangered animals.

Marker urges the public to take action by refusing to support exotic pet ownership and by raising awareness of the issue. Cheetahs are the fastest animals on land, capable of reaching speeds of up to 70 miles per hour. Yet against the machinery of global trafficking, even they can’t outrun extinction. Their future now depends not on speed, but on awareness, enforcement, and the collective will to protect them before it’s too late.

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