The Borneo Post

Vietnam seizes suspected ivory from Congo

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HANOI: Vietnam has seized more than nine tonnes of suspected ivory in a timber shipment from the Republic of Congo, customs officials said yesterday, in one of the country’s largest illegal wildlife hauls in years.

Though it is illegal to buy and sell ivory in communist Vietnam, lax law enforcemen­t has allowed the illicit trade to flourish on the black market.

The government has vowed to crack down on illegal wildlife trade in the face of mounting internatio­nal pressure and authoritie­s said the latest bust in central Danang city was the biggest in years.

“A huge 9.1-tonne package of goods suspected to be ivory hidden inside timber logs was found and confiscate­d,” according to Hai Quan news site, the official mouthpiece of Vietnam Customs.

The ivory- stuffed timber logs were discovered Tuesday at Danang’s main port on a ship from the Republic of Congo in central Africa, it added.

A customs official told AFP “authoritie­s are still inspecting before making a final conclusion” about the substance.

Images on state media showed piles of alleged tusks being weighed by officers in a warehouse after the seizure.

Ivory is used for jewellery, decorative housewares and traditiona­l medicine in Vietnam, which is also a popular transit hub for illegal wildlife destined for elsewhere in Asia, mainly China.

The government has struggled to crack down on the illicit trade as sales have moved online from traditiona­l marketplac­es.

Britain’s Prince William was in Vietnam in 2016 to host a wildlife conference where he delivered an urgent plea to end traffickin­g to save critically endangered species. — AFP

 ??  ?? Photo shows Vietnamese customs officials inspecting seized suspected ivory inside a timber shipment in a warehouse in Danang. — AFP photo
Photo shows Vietnamese customs officials inspecting seized suspected ivory inside a timber shipment in a warehouse in Danang. — AFP photo

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