The Borneo Post

Shark fins found in Singapore Airlines shipment to Hong Kong

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Environmen­tal campaigner­s said yesterday a hidden shipment of shark fins including some from endangered species had been shipped to Hong Kong via Singapore Airlines, despite a ban by the carrier.

Hong Kong is one of the world’s biggest shark fin trading hubs and it remains readily available in seafood stores and restaurant­s, despite pressure from conservati­onists and bans by some airlines and food outlets.

US environmen­tal group Sea Shepherd said the 989 kilogramme shipment had arrived in Hong Kong earlier this month from Colombo in Sri Lanka, via Singapore.

It included fins from endangered whale sharks hidden among legal fins to avoid detection, the group said. Fins from endangered species require a special permit to be exported.

“Singapore Airlines are yet another victim of these shark fin smugglers, who deceived the airline by declaring the shipment as ‘ dried seafood’ to skirt the airline’s internal booking checks,” said Gary Stokes, Asia director for Sea Shepherd Global.

Singapore Airlines, which banned the shipment of shark fin in 2014, said it had blackliste­d the shipper.

The airline added it had “sent out a reminder to all our stations” to conduct sampling checks on shipments made under the label ‘dried seafood’ to ensure they did not contain shark fin.

Sea Shepherd called for the Hong Kong government to tighten rules to combat wildlife crime and close loopholes which allow endangered shark fins to slip past inspection­s.

Hong Kong has an unenviable reputation for trading in several controvers­ial, banned or endangered commoditie­s including ivory, shark fin, rhino horn and tiger parts. Critics routinely accuse the territory of failing to do enough to stamp out such practices. — AFP

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