Ivory intended for East Asia, says expert
A huge consignment of ivory, valued at about Dh 5.5 million,
intercepted on Tuesday in Sri Lanka en route to Dubai had probably been
destined for East Asia, not the UAE, an animal welfare expert says.
The illegal consignment, which would have meant at least 180
elephants would have had to be killed, was seized at the Colombo Port by
Sri Lanka Customs officers after a tip-off.
The shipment, which consisted of 359 pieces and weighed 1.5 tonnes,
had come from Kenya and was hidden among logs in containers marked
plastic waste. No arrests have yet been made.
"If the shipment was coming to the UAE, it would probably have been
for re-export somewhere else," said Dr Elsayed Mohamed, Programme
Manager at the Dubai office of the International Fund for Animal Welfare
(Ifaw).
"This is a regular way of shipping, we have seen this before. It is a
way for smugglers to try to evade the authorities and cover up their
smuggling.
"If they take it directly from Kenya, the authorities in the Far East
will check any shipment coming from Africa for ivory.
"So they use indirect routes because they believe the authorities
will not be expecting a shipment from somewhere else.
"The shipment weighed 1.5 tonnes so it would have been going to a
carving factory, which do not exist at all here in the UAE. These
factories are mostly in the Far East."
Jason Bell, director of Ifaw's elephant program, said: "The boldness
of these thugs in attempting to sidestep authorities by developing a
complex web of delivery networks is quite breathtaking. "The ivory is
smuggled into markets in Europe and Asia, most often China."
A senior officer at Sri Lankan Customs said an investigation into the
case would be completed in two weeks, by which time officers would know
who the intended buyer was.
"The consignment remains in Colombo at the moment," said Udayanath
Liyanage, the deputy director of Central Intelligence.
"We have not come across such a large quantity before in the entire
region. It has a huge value on the black market, with each kilogram
fetching US$1,000 [Dh3,673]."
Liyanage said the tip-off leading to the seizure came from the World
Customs Organisation's regional intelligence liaison office for Asia and
the Pacific region, based in Seoul, South Korea.
Jang Gwang-hyeon, the office's deputy head, said 50 seizures of
elephant tusks were reported worldwide last year for a total quantity of
2,481 tusks.
"The ships mostly departed from African countries and their final
destination was an Asian country," Gwang-hyeon said.
The elephants are sometimes gunned down by poaching gangs from
helicopters.
"The poachers usually kill every animal in range, so if it is a herd
of up to 20 elephants they will kill everything," he added.
"We have noticed a high level of poaching in Africa in the past three
months.
High demand in the Far East is encouraging the poachers."This year,
650 free-roaming elephants were killed by poachers in northern Cameroon.
- The National UAE
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