The Star Malaysia

101 pangolins seized off boat

Indonesia nabs two during raid on fishing vessel off Sumatra

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PEKANBARU: Indonesian authoritie­s have seized more than 100 pangolins, all of them alive, an official said, a haul of the critically endangered species that conservati­onists estimate to be worth about US$1.5mil (RM6.2mil).

Indonesian officials discovered the pangolins on Tuesday in a raid on a fishing boat off the east coast of Sumatra island, the navy said in a press statement.

Authoritie­s were tipped off by local residents who said men were attempting to smuggle the scaly mammals to Malaysia.

Pangolins – docile animals with a thick armour – are indigenous to parts of South-East Asia and Africa and are the world’s most trafficked mammal.

Two men, aged 22 and 25, were arrested after they confessed they were paid money to transport the pangolins to Malaysia.

If found guilty, the suspects could face a maximum of five years in prison or a Rp100mil (RM30,900) fine for violating Indonesia’s conservati­on law.

“We received 101 live pangolins seized by the navy yesterday (Tuesday) but four of them later died,” said the head of a local conservati­on agency.

The seized pangolins will be released in the nearest national park, said Mahfudz, who like many Indonesian­s goes by one name.

Dwi Adhiasto, from the Wildlife Conservati­on Society (WCS), which works with Indonesian authoritie­s to halt wildlife crime, said the shipment was worth about US$25,000 (RM105,700) wholesale, but could fetch as much as US$1.5mil when sold internatio­nally.

In June, naval officers discovered 223 pangolins, 24 of which were already dead, as well as nine large bags of pangolin scales in a warehouse near Medan, North Sumatra.

Pangolin meat is considered a delicacy in China and their scales are sometimes used in the produc- tion of crystal methamphet­amine.

Soaring demand for the creature has seen an estimated one million pangolins snatched from Asian and African forests over the past decade, sending their numbers to perilous lows. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? Free me: A pangolin is seen in a cage after the recent raid in Pekanbaru, Riau.
— AFP Free me: A pangolin is seen in a cage after the recent raid in Pekanbaru, Riau.

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