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3 tonnes of elephant ivory worth millions hidden in shipping container in Thailand

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Three tonnes of elephant ivory worth millions hidden in shipping container in Thailand


PUBLISHED : Monday, 27 April, 2015, 11:19pm
UPDATED : Monday, 27 April, 2015, 11:19pm

Agence France-Presse in Bangkok

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Thai Customs officials present elephant tusks worth millionsof dollars that they found hidden in tea leaf sacks.Photo: AFP

More than three tonnes of elephant ivory have been found at a Thai port stashed in a container shipped from Kenya, customs said - the second huge haul of tusks from Africa in less than a week.

The discovery, which would be worth millions of dollars on the black market, was destined for Laos where the illegal ivory trade flourishes.

Some 511 pieces of ivory, weighing more than three tonnes, was found on April 25 in a container "marked as tea leaves transported from Mombasa, Kenya, and on to Laos", Thai customs said in a statement.

Scores of whole tusks - some nearly two metres long - were among the pieces seized.

A record four tonnes of African elephant ivory was seized at Bangkok's main port on April 20, in a container that arrived from the Democratic Republic of Congo and was also destined for Laos.

Once in neighbouring Laos, authorities believe the ivory would likely be sold on to buyers from China, Vietnam or back into Thailand, countries where ivory ornaments are coveted despite fears the trade is pushing wild elephants to extinction.

Laos "is increasingly being used as a major transit point for such large volumes of illicit ivory and other wildlife products", Chris Shepherd of conservation group Traffic said.

"The increase in large-scale seizures is of great concern. Whether the ivory is coming from freshly killed elephants or from stockpiles of ivory in Africa needs to be investigated."

Conservationists say poaching and conflict have destroyed large numbers of African elephants in the wild, prompting experts to warn the species could be wiped out within decades.

Thailand has launched a crackdown on the ivory trade amid international pressure. Under Thai law, registered ivory from domesticated Thai elephants can be sold. But experts say that loophole allows criminal gangs to launder poached African ivory through the kingdom.



 
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