Chinese market killing anteaters across India
ILLEGAL TRADE In the last few years more than 2,000 pangolins were killed despite antipoaching measures. Their scales sell for ₹1.6 lakh a kg in China
The increasing demand in China for pangolin scales, known for their aphrodisiac and medicinal value, is threatening the existence of the endangered mammals in central India.
According to sources, international smugglers have been targeting pangolins in Madhya Pradesh through conduits – mostly forest dwellers – despite anti-poaching initiatives undertaken by state law enforcement agencies. This has resulted in many illegal hunters ending up in traps set by wildlife officials, enabling the authorities to identify a multilayered poaching network spread across 10 states in the country.
The MP forest department, which created a special task force (STF) in March 2015 to bust the network, has arrested 122 people from 10 states so far. For the first time, it has also pushed Interpol to issue a red-corner notice against an international Pangolin poacher who jumped bail. Jaiy Tamang, who hails from Lhasa in Tibet, is yet to be re-arrested.
The STF investigation has revealed that the poachers have established three major routes for smuggling pangolins from central India to China – the first through Uttar Pradesh-Nepal-Tibet, the second through Kolkata-Manipur-Mizoram-Myanmar-Laos, and the third (still upcoming route) through Uttarakhand to Tibet.
State STF (wildlife crime) in-charge Ritesh Sirothia said consignments of pangolin scales that enter Nepal through Bhairawa and Nepalganj are shipped to Xigazê in Tibet, from where they are sent to China. “In the Northeast, smuggling of pangolin scales to China happens through Churachandpur district of Manipur, and Kolasib and Champhai districts of Mizoram. From there, the consignments are smuggled to Mandalay in Myanmar, and finally to the Golden Triangle (the tri-junction of Myanmar, Laos and Thailand),” he said.
According to STF officials, local poachers are paid anywhere between ₹2,000 and ₹5,000 for a kg of pangolin scales. While suppliers from the districts get ₹5,000 to ₹8,000 for the same amount of contraband, the rate goes up as the load moves forward – with middlemen in Kolkata earning ₹8,000 to ₹15,000 and traffickers at the border getting ₹35,000 to ₹40,000. Once the scales reach China, they cost around $2,500 a kg (or ₹1.6 lakh). Incidentally, the price of pangolin scales in China was just $1,000 (₹66,000) in 2015. The steep hike in price has been attributed to the sharp increase in demand, but reduction of supply due to a slump in number of pangolins in the wild.
The racket first came to light on September 21, 2014, when five people were caught in Madhya Pradesh’s Balaghat district with three kg of pangolin scales. The next day, a man called Jamal Iqbal was apprehended with 43 kg of Pangolin scales near the Chhindwara-Maharashtra border. It was Jamal who informed STF interrogators about the extent of India’s poaching network. Following this, the state forest department constituted the STF with Ritesh Sirothia as its head in March 2015.
Sirothia said his team had to chase leads as far as the Northeast, Delhi, Myanmar and Nepal to unravel the various layers of the network. “Till now, we have traversed nearly 40,000 to 50,000 km in 10 states, and booked 122 people for pangolin poaching,” he said.
A poacher arrested in Hoshangabad last summer had revealed that illegal operators even use postal services to send pangolin scales to Kolkata, he added. RP Singh, additional principal chief conservator for forests, told HT that the demand for pangolin scales has gone up considerably. “However, we have done a lot to check it,” he said.
While five of the 122 arrested poachers are still in jail, the rest have been released on bail.
Madhya Pradesh, which has 12.44% forest
Madhya Pradesh Maharashtra West Bengal Odisha Assam Mizoram Andhra Pradesh Uttar Pradesh Chhattisgarh Delhi