The Phnom Penh Post

Ivory, pangolin scales seized at PP Dry Port

- Niem Chheng

A HAUL of elephant ivory and pangolin scales stuffed in what officials estimated to be “one or two” pieces of timber was found in a container at a shipping yard – to which it had been transporte­d – in the capital’s Por Sen Chey district on Saturday.

According to Te Sokmuny, chief of the provincial department of customs and excise, authoritie­s launched the raid at Phnom Penh Dry Port – managed by railway operator Royal Railway – following a tip-off from the Regional Intelligen­ce Liaison Office (RILO) of the World Customs Organisati­on, to which the Kingdom belongs.

“RILO is an internatio­nal NGO that shares secret informatio­n about crimes … If they have any informatio­n on illegal smuggling, they inform Cambodia to be ready for the bust,” he said, adding that the haul likely originated in Africa.

“We don’t know how many kilograms there are, because they were put in the timber . . . there are one or two pieces of timber,” said Vuthy Ravong, project manager of Wildlife Alliance’s Wildlife Rapid Rescue Team, which was involved in the raid.

Sieng Borin, chief of the provincial agricultur­al department, said the container had been transporte­d to the port by train “from the direction of Sihanoukvi­lle”.

“The port owner is not responsibl­e as [the port] is just a private place to store containers,” he said. “We are searching for the owner of the container.”

Experts have in recent years called Cambodia a transit point for the illicit trade of ivory from Africa to Vietnam and China, particular­ly after crackdowns in Vietnam, which used to be a top export destinatio­n.

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