Kenya Wildlife Service officers display ivory seized at the Port of Mombasa on October 12, 2013. Singapore authorities seized the biggest illegal shipment of ivory and other exotic animal parts in more than a decade on Tuesday, with the haul from Kenya worth an estimated $6 million. FILE PHOTO
SINGAPORE
Singapore
authorities seized the biggest illegal shipment of ivory and other
exotic animal parts in more than a decade on Tuesday, with the haul from
Kenya worth an estimated $6 million (about Sh570 million).
The
animal parts were discovered stashed among bags of tea leaves in two
20-foot containers while transiting through the city-state to Vietnam,
the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) and Singapore Customs said
in a joint statement.
Authorities uncovered 1,783 pieces of raw ivory tusk hidden among the bags, the statement said.
Four pieces of rhino horn and 22 teeth believed to be from African big cats — cheetahs and leopards — were also found in the containers, it said.
The
haul weighed 3.7 tonnes and is the largest seizure of illegal ivory in
Singapore since 2002 when six tonnes of ivory were intercepted, the
statement said.
SEABORNE TRADE
The
shipping of ivory has been banned since 1989 under the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora
(Cites) — to which Singapore, a major hub for seaborne trade, is a signatory.
In
April last year, local authorities intercepted a shipment of illegal
ivory worth Sg$2.0 million, labelled as coffee berries, transiting from
Africa, according to the statement.
A similar cargo, also from Africa, worth Sg$2.5 million was uncovered in January 2013.
Ivory
ornaments are coveted in Asian countries like Vietnam, Thailand and
China despite fears that the trade is pushing wild elephants to
extinction.
Rhino horn is prized for its supposed medicinal properties.
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