Thai police arrest African ivory traffickers


Bangkok - Police have arrested two Thai nationals for trafficking in African ivory, a crime that carries a maximum four-year jail sentence, police said Tuesday. Samat Chokechoima and Kanok Wongsarot were arrested Monday in a sting operation in which Thai
Posted : Tue, 17 Nov 2009 07:46:21 GMT
By : dpa
Category : Nature (Environment)
News Alerts by Email ( click here )
Nature Environment News | Home
Bangkok - Police have arrested two Thai nationals for trafficking in African ivory, a crime that carries a maximum four-year jail sentence, police said Tuesday. Samat Chokechoima and Kanok Wongsarot were arrested Monday in a sting operation in which Thai police posed as buyers of carved African ivory items, Police Lieutenant Colonel Thanayos Gengkasrikit, spokesman of the Natural Resource and Environmental Crime Division said.

The suspects face a maximum of four years in prison and fines of up to 40,000 baht (1,150 dollars) under Thailand's Wild Animal Preservation and Protection Act.

The law protects species listed on the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna, and another fine up to 100,000 baht under the Customs Act for the import and export of illegal goods.

Described as "middle-level operators" in the illicit African ivory trade in Thailand, the arrest of Samat and Kanok was the result of a year-long investigation involving Thai and US officials, along with the FREELAND Foundation and the ASEAN Wildlife Enforcement Network.

"These arrests illustrate how south-east Asia's law enforcement authorities are starting to catch up with international organized wildlife crime," FREELAND executive director Steve Galster said.

"Successful enforcement actions like this demonstrate that wildlife criminals operating in south-east Asia need to watch their backs," he said.

The ASEAN-WEN was set up in 2004 to strengthen regional coordination between the region's police and customs officials to crack down on the billion-dollar traffic in endangered animals and plants and exotic wildlife items, such as African ivory.

South-east Asia is a major hub for the illicit global traffic in African ivory worth an estimated 10-30 billion dollars a year.

Thai customs in August seized two tons of African ivory worth an estimated 1.5 million dollars.

Similar seizures have been reported in other south-east Asian airports, including a seizure of 3.5 tons of elephant tusks worth 2 million dollars in Manila in May, and 6.2 tons of African elephant tusks worth an estimated 29 million dollars in March at Hai Phong Port, Vietnam.

The illegal international trade in ivory is deemed the primary reason for the continuing decline of Africa's elephant populations.

Copyright DPA

Subscribe now
For more information related to Thai police arrest African ivory traffickers delivered to your inbox

Related News



blog comments powered by Disqus


Follow The Earth Times
Subscribe to RSS Follow Earth Times on TwitterNews by email
Share/Save/Bookmark



 
 

 
Subscribe to free Earthtimes
News Alerts by Email Click here
For RSS Feeds Click here
or Create your own RSS

Add to Google Toolbar
Breaking News
Press Releases

 


Trending Stories this week

Environment

»
»
»
»
»
»
»
»
»
»

carbon emissions

earthquake

» Moderate earthquake rattles Greek islands
» Quake rocks southern Mexico, one dead - Summary
» Quake rocks southern Mexico, no damage or injuries reported - Summary
» Magnitude-5.5 earthquake shakes Canada
» At least two killed in Indonesia quake - 4th Update
» Northern Kosovo hit by minor earthquake, no causalities

floods

» Flood death toll hits 26 in Yemen
» Heavy rains in Japan leave 7 dead, 6 missing - Summary
» Heavy rains in Japan leave five dead, eight missing - Summary
» China fears 'massive flooding' as death toll hits 600
» Thousands more evacuated, dykes blasted as China battles floods
» Flash floods leave 22 dead, 38 missing in south-west China - Summary

BP

» BP stops oil flow as key test of ruptured well resumes - Summary
» EXTRA: BP stops oil flow as key test of ruptured well resumes
» Make-or-break test begins of ruptured BP oil well - Summary
» BP begins critical test of ruptured well's integrity
» EXTRA: Leaking well capped, tests planned ahead of stoppage attempt
» BP disaster region braces for tropical storm Alex

conservation

» Nations pledge action to double tiger population by 2022
» Moko the playful New Zealand dolphin may be dead
» German state bank gives 24.8M dollars to African nature reserve
» Sea Shepherd cuts ties with anti-whaling activist on trial in Japan
» National park mining plan sparks row in New Zealand
» Australian police board whaling protest boat

energy

» Bees have their own built-in TomTom
» LEADALL: Rising death toll, disruptions in Europe's cold wave
» BACKGROUND: What causes earthquakes
» Artificial reefs to support corals in Persian Gulf

nuclear

» Pakistan-India impasse puts South Asia ecology at risk - Feature

climate change

» Norway and Indonesia ink billion-dollar deal to protect forests
» World Bank: Climate change hits poor in Africa, South Asia hardest
» New species discovered in Greater Mekong face the heat - Summary
» Sea levels to rise a metre this century, German experts warn
» Researchers: UN panel should be created to safeguard ecosystems
» Global warming making fish hard of hearing

emissions

» Airline industry to pledge radical emission cuts at summit, says BA
» Japan's new government seeks deeper cuts in greenhouse gases

hurricane

» First Atlantic hurricane wanes after lethal strike - Summary
» Hurrican Alex pounds Mexico, Texas - 2nd Update
» Hurricane Alex makes landfall near US-Mexican border
» Tropical storm Alex strengthening off Mexico
» Hurricane Jimena begins dumping rain on Mexico

The Earth Times
News Category

© 2010 www.earthtimes.org, The Earth Times, All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy
Earth Times accept no responsibility or liability either directly or indirectly for views or opinions expressed in articles or comments.