Customs
officials in Vietnam have confiscated illegally imported ivory for the second
time in two weeks. The elephant tusks and pangolin scales were hidden amongst
red beans in a container imported from Malaysia.
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| Seized ivories and ivory products prior to its destruction in Brussels, Belgium(Photo: Xinhua/Gong Bing) |
According
to the Vietnamese VNExpress news website, the police seized ivory in central
Danang's Tien Sa port on Tuesday.
"This
is a very big case. At least a ton of elephant tusks and pangolin scales were
hidden inside the container," said Dang Van Toan, head of the control
division of Da Nang customs.
In a
similar case last week, Vietnamese police busted two tons of ivory from
Nigeria.
Earlier
this month, officials confiscated more than 700 kilograms of rhino horns and
elephant tusks imported from Mozambique.
Ivory
products are popular in the Southeast Asian country. A kilogram of elephant
tusk sells for at least $2,100 (1,822 euros) on the black market - around
double the country's annual per capita GDP.
Vietnamese
activists have long campaigned to convince people not to buy ivory products,
but they haven't had much success.
Trading in
ivory has been a crime since 1989 following the hunt of scores of elephants in
Africa. Their population had dropped from millions in the mid-20th century to
just 600,000 by the end of the 1980s.
shs/msh (AFP, dpa)
Related Article:
"More than just a symbolic act." Thailand destroys ivory stockpile amid junta crackdown http://t.co/IbZQdZjPHm pic.twitter.com/4HtdLSUQPx
— Agence France-Presse (@AFP) 26 augustus 2015

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