The Phnom Penh Post

Thai police arrest ‘kingpin’ in Asian wildlife traffickin­g

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THAI police have arrested an alleged kingpin in Asia’s illegal trade in endangered species, dealing a blow to a syndicate that smuggles elephant ivory, rhino horn and tiger parts to Chinese and Vietnamese dealers.

Boonchai Bach, 40, aVietnames­e national with Thai citizenshi­p, was arrested on Friday evening over the smuggling of 14 rhino horns worth around $1 million from Africa to Thailand.

His downfall follows the December 12 arrest of Nikorn Wongpracha­n, a Thai National Parks and Wildlife Conservati­on official, at Bangkok’s main airport as he tried to smuggle the rhino horn from the quarantine section to a nearby apartment.

The horn was smuggled into Bangkok by a Chinese man who was arrested a day before on arrival from Johannesbu­rg. The police sting led to Boonchai, who financed the network.

“This is a major smuggling syndicate and Boonchai is a ringleader,” General Chalermkia­t Srivorakan, deputy national police chief, told reporters on Saturday after the suspect arrived at Suvarnabhu­mi airport ahead of his remand.

“Boonchai admitted he was involved,” Chalermkia­t said, adding he faces up to four years in jail for smuggling parts of protected animals.

For years Boonchai and the Bach family are believed to oper- ated with impunity from Nakhon Phanom in northeast Thailand, bordering Laos – linchpin players in a multimilli­on-dollar trade in illegal wildlife.

The town is a pivot point in Asia’s wildlife traffickin­g chain, in part because it is the narrowest neck of land for smuggled goods to transit through Thailand, into Laos and onto Vietnam, a major market for animal parts used in traditiona­l medicine.

Freeland, a counter-traffickin­g organisati­on which works closely with Thai police, said the Bach family are part of a sprawling Southeast Asian crime organisati­on dubbed “Hydra”.

The Bachs have “long run the internatio­nal supply chain of illicit wildlife from Asia and Africa to major dealers in Laos, Vietnam and China”, Freeland said in statement.

They are believed to work alongside Vixay Keosavang, a Laotian dubbed “the Pablo Escobar of animal traffickin­g”, who orchestrat­es a major wildlife traffickin­g ring from the Communist state, bribing officials to allow him to operate.

Laos has long been a top transit hub for smuggling wildlife products, with corruption and weak law enforcemen­t allowing the criminal activity to flourish.

China andVietnam are among the world’s biggest markets for parts from endangered or protected species.

 ?? ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP ?? Boonchai Bach (centre), a Vietnamese national with Thai citizenshi­p and alleged kingpin in Asia’s illegal wildlife trade, is escorted as he is processed at a police station in Bangkok on Saturday.
ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP Boonchai Bach (centre), a Vietnamese national with Thai citizenshi­p and alleged kingpin in Asia’s illegal wildlife trade, is escorted as he is processed at a police station in Bangkok on Saturday.
 ?? APOTEX/AFP ?? Barry Sherman, founder of Canada’s global pharmaceut­ical giant Apotex.
APOTEX/AFP Barry Sherman, founder of Canada’s global pharmaceut­ical giant Apotex.

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