Bangkok Post

Customs seize record 700kg haul of pangolin scales

-

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian customs officers have seized more than 700kg of pangolin scales, the country’s largest haul of the scales considered by some to have medicinal properties, officials said yesterday.

The 712kg haul worth 9.2 million ringgit (73.4 million baht) was made last week in two separate seizures.

On May 2, eight gunny sacks of the scales weighing 408kg were found at a Kuala Lumpur airport warehouse. They are believed to have arrived on a flight from Accra, Ghana, which transited in Dubai.

Two days later, 10 more sacks weighing 304kg were found and seized. These were supposedly on a flight from Kinshasa, DR Congo, to Nairobi, Kenya, transiting in Dubai before reaching Kuala Lumpur.

Malaysian officials say they are investigat­ing.

Pangolins are indigenous to the jungles of Indonesia, parts of Malaysia and areas of southern Thailand, and their meat is considered a delicacy in China.

They are classified as a protected species under the UN’s Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species and internatio­nal trade in any Asian pangolin species is banned under the convention.

The shy pangolin’s brown scales are made of nothing more than keratin — the same substance as fingernail­s — but are highly prized in Vietnam and China where they are misleading­ly touted as bearing medicinal properties.

Soaring demand has seen an estimated one million pangolins plucked from Asian and African forests over the past decade, shunting them onto the list of species at the highest risk of extinction.

 ?? AP ?? A Malaysian customs official holds seized pangolin scales after a press conference at its office in Sepang yesterday. They are believed to have come from Africa.
AP A Malaysian customs official holds seized pangolin scales after a press conference at its office in Sepang yesterday. They are believed to have come from Africa.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand