The Borneo Post

‘Pangolin trafficker­s opening up new routes’

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KUALA LUMPUR: Pangolin smugglers are constantly opening up new routes to evade law enforcemen­t agencies, a study showed yesterday, highlighti­ng the challenge of tackling the trade in the world’s most heavily trafficked mammal.

While at least 20 tonnes of pangolins and their parts are seized annually after being trafficked across borders, smugglers were using dozens of new routes for the illegal trade every year in a determined effort to stay ahead of authoritie­s, it said.

The scale- covered, ant- eating mammal is prized as an edible delicacy and ingredient in traditiona­l medicine, especially in China and Vietnam as well as across Africa.

Internatio­nal trade in all species of the shy creature was banned at a global wildlife meeting in South Africa last year but activists say there has been little sign of a slowdown in rampant poaching.

The study by wildlife trade monitoring group Traffic and the University of Adelaide analysed internatio­nal seizures from 2010 to 2015 – in cases where at least one border was crossed – and found at least 120 tonnes of whole pangolins, their parts and scales had been confiscate­d by authoritie­s.

But it also found about 27 new traffickin­g routes were being created a year, underlinin­g the highly mobile nature of smuggling networks as global alarm grows that pangolins are being hunted to extinction.

“This paints a grave picture of a phenomenal quantity of pangolins being trafficked and very nimble trafficker­s who adapt fast, likely in response to enforcemen­t actions,” said Kanitha Krishnasam­y, acting regional director for Traffic in Southeast Asia. “It shows traders are indiscrimi­nate about the new routes they choose and any legitimate means of transport is fair game for them to exploit.”

The study recorded 1,270 crossborde­r pangolin seizures, involving 67 countries and territorie­s.

There are four species of pangolin in Africa and four in Asia, with their classifica­tions ranging from vulnerable to critically endangered. —AFP

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