France24 – AFP, 26 March 2013
AFP - The Thai navy on Tuesday said it had intercepted wildlife traffickers attempting to smuggle 104 endangered pangolins to China on the Mekong river.
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| A seized pangolin rests in a cage as another hangs outside during a press briefing held at the customs department in Bangkok on September 26, 2011. |
AFP - The Thai navy on Tuesday said it had intercepted wildlife traffickers attempting to smuggle 104 endangered pangolins to China on the Mekong river.
The
creatures, prized for their skin, scales and meat and hunted extensively in
Southeast Asia, are believed to have originated in Malaysia or southern
Thailand.
"The
pangolins were on their way to Laos and then finally China," said
Lieutenant Commander Garan Minwong of the Thai navy's Mekong river task force
in the country's northern border area.
He said two
suspects were arrested during the raid late Monday before they were able to
load the live pangolins onto a boat.
Thailand,
seen as a hub for traffickers of all endangered species, came under pressure
over the rampant smuggling of ivory through its territory during Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) talks in Bangkok this month.

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