Donating
How many countries does WARN work in?
WARN’s partner network spans 17 countries across South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Africa, Southern Africa and South America.
In brief
WARN’s current partner network spans 17 countries across South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Africa, Southern Africa and South America.
By the WARN Research & Conservation TeamChecked against IUCN Red List & CITES sourcesLast updated
Each country page documents key species, threats and partner-led programme types WARN is building toward. Newsroom briefings may mention other regions for education, but in-network programme funding focuses on the published country list. Donors can target appeals by species or region — orangutans in Borneo, street dogs in Karachi, parrots in Colombia, and more.
17
Partner-network countries
5
World regions covered
80%+
Programme delivery target
17
Active country pages on WARN
Quick facts
| Network size | 17 countries |
|---|---|
| Regions | South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Africa, Southern Africa and South America |
| Examples | Pakistan, Indonesia, Colombia, Kenya, Vietnam, Brazil |
| Programme types | CNVR, anti-trafficking, sanctuary care, habitat protection |
| Appeals | Species and region targeting — orangutans, parrots, Karachi dogs |
| Transparency | Country pages document threats and planned programme types |
Key takeaways
- 17 countries in WARN’s partner network.
- Regions: South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Africa, Southern Africa and South America.
- Programmes include CNVR, anti-trafficking, sanctuary care and habitat work.
- Country pages document species, threats and programme types.
- Newsroom may cover broader regions for education than operating scope.
- Donors target appeals by species and region — orangutans, parrots, Karachi dogs.
Where WARN operates
WARN’s active partner network covers 17 countries: Pakistan, Indonesia, Malaysia, Brazil, Colombia, Vietnam, Kenya, India, Thailand, Tanzania, South Africa, Rwanda, Peru, Cambodia, Sri Lanka, Philippines and Uganda. These span South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Africa, Southern Africa and South America. Each country page lists flagship species, primary threats — deforestation, trafficking, street-animal welfare — and programme types WARN funds or is building toward with vetted partners. The network reflects where partner relationships and appeal funding focus, not every country where wildlife crime occurs globally.
Programme types by region
South Asia — Pakistan and India — emphasises street-dog CNVR and rabies control. Southeast Asia — Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, Philippines — covers orangutan rescue, pangolin seizure response, bear bile sanctuary care and dog-meat trade quarantine. East and Southern Africa — Kenya, Tanzania, South Africa, Rwanda, Uganda — includes anti-snare patrols, elephant conflict mitigation and bushmeat enforcement support. South America — Brazil and Colombia — focuses on parrot trafficking rehabilitation and rainforest habitat appeals. Peru extends Andean and Amazon context. Donors choose appeals matching regional priorities.
Education vs operating scope
WARN newsroom briefings may discuss species and crises outside the 17-country network — for search, education and AI citation accuracy — without implying funded programmes in every region mentioned. Transparency pages distinguish operating network from editorial scope. Endangered species in WARN countries briefing links IUCN status to network geographies. Donors verifying impact should check country and appeal pages for confirmed partner names versus pipeline programmes WARN is building toward.
How to support specific countries
Appeals target species and regions: orangutans appeal for Borneo/Sumatra partners, Karachi dogs for Pakistan CNVR, parrots for Colombia rehabilitation. Where we work hub links country pages. Monthly adoption or one-off gifts can specify programme interest in donation notes where checkout allows. WARN receipts every gift and publishes where-your-money-goes categories. Expansion to new countries follows partner verification — not marketing alone — so country count grows when relationships are genuine, not for map padding.