Yahoo – AFP,
April 10, 2017
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| Malaysian Airports Customs Director Hamzah Sundang (C) shows seized rhino horns imported from Mozambique in a crate listed as containing art objects, April 10, 2017 (AFP Photo/MANAN VATSYAYANA) |
Sepang
(Malaysia) (AFP) - Enforcement officials in Malaysia have seized 18 rhinoceros
horns imported from Mozambique, weighing 51.4 kg and worth 13.7 million ringgit
($3.1 million), a senior customs official said Monday.
Airport
customs director Hamzah Sundang said officials acting on a tip-off discovered
the horns in a wooden crate at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport cargo
terminal last Friday.
The haul is
the latest indication that Malaysia has become an Asian transit hub for the
illicit ivory and rhino horn trade.
The crate,
listed as containing art objects, was imported from Mozambique on board a Qatar
Airways flight which transited in Doha before arriving in Malaysia, Hamzah said
in a statement.
Hamzah said
the destination was listed as being in the town of Nilai in Malaysia's southern
state of Negri Sembilan but it was a false address.
Rhino horn
has been used in traditional Chinese medicine for thousands of years and is
also carved into highly prized libation cups.
Under
Malaysian law, it is an offence to import rhino horns without a licence.
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The seizure
of a haul of rhino horns at Kuala Lumpur International Airport is
the latest
indication that Malaysia has become an Asian transit hub for the
illicit trade
(AFP Photo/MANAN VATSYAYANA)
|
In April
last year Malaysia destroyed 9.5 tonnes of elephant ivory that it had seized
over the years, in a move intended to deter smugglers who have long used the
country as a trans-shipment point.
Malaysia
has previously announced in parliament that 4,624 ivory tusks were confiscated
between 2011 and 2014.
Ivory from
African elephants is typically smuggled to Asia where it is carved into
ornaments.
Hamzah also
said 2.12 kg of ketamine worth 94.4 million ringgit was confiscated at the
airport's budget terminal from a foreigner who arrived last Wednesday from
Chennai in India.
"During
an X-ray of the man's bag, we found white crystals which we believe was
ketamine," he said.
Hamzah said
the case was being investigated under the Dangerous Drugs Act 1952 which
carries a mandatory death penalty upon conviction.


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