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From : http://www.nation.co.ke/News/2.../kp482l/-/index.html A consignment of elephant tusks shipped from Kenya has been intercepted by authorities in Thailand. The 247 tusks worth over $3.3 million (Sh274 million), and weighing two tonnes were disguised as frozen fish. Kenya Wildlife Service acting public relations officer Esther Walya said they were awaiting information from Thailand. “We can’t respond until Thai authorities contact us with more information,” she said. The tusks were concealed among hundreds of boxes of mackerel, in a boat at Bangkok Port on the Chao Phraya River, Thai customs department said. The haul, which officials said was the biggest in a year and equated to at least 123 elephants killed, weighed 2,033 kg. Another 2,000kg of elephant tusks, shipped through the Mombasa Port were seized in Vietnam in May last year. Investigations showed the ivory originated from Selous National Park, one of the biggest conservation centres in Tanzania. In February, police at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport seized two foreigners, travelling on Singapore passports, as they attempted to leave Kenya with 92kg of ivory. The raw ivory was packed in four suitcases and the suspects were headed to Bangkok. Investigations into the illegal ivory trade have shown Kenya is a safe route for smuggling cartels, but the country has been cleared of being the source of elephant tusks and ivory products seized in various parts of the world in recent months. In Thailand, Wildlife anti-trafficking group Freedland said it was the first time customs officials had found ivory coming into Thailand by boat and said it showed smugglers had changed tactics. “It is another sign that steady collaboration by Thai and African law enforcement is foiling ivory traffickers who are losing huge amounts of money, and that’s where you have to hit them to stop them — in the pocket,” said the group’s director, Steven Galster. Kenya has not sold ivory since 1989 and is determined to ensure trade in it is never legalised. Tanzania and Zambia, who want to resume trade in ivory, were among countries that engaged Kenya at the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species over the 2007 ban on its trade. Kenya succeeded in having the nine-year ban upheld Nec Timor Nec Temeritas | ||
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Typically what happens when you don't allow sport hunting. No reason for any of the locals to give a damn, the only way to make money off wildlife is to poach them. No hunting=no game A shot not taken is always a miss | |||
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Disagree. This is not about hunting or not hunting. This is about money to pay for conservation - doesn't matter where it comes from. Hunting doesn't provide enough for ALL protection required and there is equal amounts of ivory poaching in hunting blocks as in non-hunting blocks. In fact, in Tz, more poaching of elephants occur in hunting blocks than in National Parks! Why? Because Parks have more money for law enforcements. Sure, remove hunting where it occurs and you remove ANY source of income for the little protection occuring and that is bad. But that money is currently NOT enough and it does NOT prevent or stop poaching "...Them, they were Giants!" J.A. Hunter describing the early explorers and settlers of East Africa hunting is not about the killing but about the chase of the hunt.... Ortega Y Gasset | |||
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So since the UN and all world wide "conservation" NGO's agree that poaching Ele's and Rhino's is a problem, why dont they penalize, criminalize the end users----you got tusks or horns without approved export docs, you be shut down and go to jail???????? Oh yeah, forgot about kickbacks and bribes.... | |||
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