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Rhino horn smugglers find a new twist

- By Christophe­r Torchia Associated Press

JOHANNESBU­RG — Internatio­nal trafficker­s have tried many ways to smuggle African rhino horns to Asia, concealing them inside wooden Buddha statues, stashing horn pieces in lobster heads kept in a refrigerat­ed container and disguising horn portions as the bases of statues.

Now, conservati­onists say, some criminal groups are processing rhino horns into powder and trinkets in South Africa before export, a trend that could reflect changing consumer tastes and make it harder for law enforcemen­t to intercept the illegal cargo.

The developmen­t highlights the difficulty of countering criminal syndicates, some of which include Chinese nationals, that show versatilit­y in the face of periodic anti-poaching successes by security officials, who have reported confiscati­ons of intact rhino horns at the main internatio­nal airport in Johannesbu­rg in past months. South Africa, which has about 80 percent of the continent’s rhinos, has experience­d record levels of poaching in the past decade.

Recent investigat­ions by South African police discovered small, home-based workshops where rhino horns were cut into small pieces, beads and bracelets, or packaged as powder, Traffic, a wildlife trade monitoring network, said in an analysis released Monday. The developmen­t will test overstretc­hed law enforcemen­t agencies if trafficker­s expand such operations, the report said.

“If someone walks through an airport wearing a necklace made of rhino horn, who’s going to stop them?” said Julian Rademeyer, who co-wrote the report and is the author of “Killing for Profit,” a book about the illegal rhino horn trade.

Rademeyer said he had been aware of the increasing phenomenon of locally manufactur­ed rhino horn products destined for export since last year. Similarly, elephant ivory products have also been produced in Africa before shipment to illegal markets elsewhere.

The Traffic report cites a June case in which police raided a house east of Johannesbu­rg and found a workshop containing large rhino horn beads, some of them polished, and horn pieces cut into cylindrica­l shapes. Two Chinese nationals and a Thai woman were arrested.

Vietnam and China have the main illegal markets for rhino horn, which is viewed by consumers as a treatment for cancer, hangovers and other ailments, even though it is made from the same substance as human fingernail­s and there is no evidence that it has medicinal value.

 ?? KIN CHEUNG/AP ?? Conservati­onists say some criminal groups are processing rhino horns into items such as chopsticks.
KIN CHEUNG/AP Conservati­onists say some criminal groups are processing rhino horns into items such as chopsticks.

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