The Star Malaysia

More than peanuts in this shipment

Customs confiscate illegal wildlife parts worth an astounding RM80.5mil

- By RUBEN SARIO newsdesk@thestar.com.my

KOTA KINABALU: It was declared as a shipment of peanuts but tucked inside the two 20-foot containers was something much more exotic.

Inspection­s by Customs officers at the Sepanggar Port here unveiled a massive cache of wildlife parts – elephant tusks and pangolin scales – worth a staggering RM80.5mil.

The Aug 29 attempt by an internatio­nal syndicate using the country’s port as a transit point to smuggle out the cache was thwarted with this latest success.

Last July, the world’s largest seizure of ivory took place in Hong Kong when more than seven tonnes arrived in a shipping container from Malaysia.

The 7,200kg shipment – valued at £7.1mil (RM39.1mil) – was uncovered by the authoritie­s in the former British colony, highlighti­ng the huge demand for the illegal ivory trade.

The pangolin, which resembles an armadillo, is the world’s most hunted animal.

Their scales are sold in the black market in Asia for their supposedly “healing properties”.

Customs director-general Datuk Seri Subromania­m Tholasy described the latest seizure as “shocking” due to its sheer volume.

“We want to know how 1,148 elephant tusks, weighing more than three tonnes, worth RM9.9mil, and five tonnes of pangolin scales valued at RM70.6mil could slip through a port of a nearby country before arriving in Sabah.

“I am warning all these syndicates not to use Malaysian ports as transhipme­nt points to smuggle illegal wildlife parts.

“We have zero tolerance and will take stern action,” he told a press conference yesterday.

Subromania­m said initial investigat­ions showed the elephant tusks and pangolin scales had originated from Nigeria and were believed to be bound for China.

“We have upgraded our capabiliti­es to scan shipments of containers which is why we managed to detect tonnes of elephant tusks and pangolin scales hidden in between a shipment of peanuts,” Subromania­m said.

He said a 42-year-old Sabahan has been detained in connection with the seizure.

The case is being investigat­ed under Section 135 of the Customs Act 1967 and the AntiMoney Laundering, Anti-Terrorism Financing and Proceeds of Unlawful Activities Act 2001.

 ??  ?? Major haul: Subromania­m (second from left) showing the seized tusks and scales.
Major haul: Subromania­m (second from left) showing the seized tusks and scales.

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