The Manila Times

China seizes 12 tons of endangered pangolin scales

- ChinaDaily AFP

BEIJING: Nearly 12 tons of smuggled pangolin scales have been country’s largest-ever seizure of the endangered mammal’s prized parts

The pangolin, whose brown scales have earned it the nickname “scaly anteater,” is the most hunted animal in the world, with one million estimated to have been plucked from Asian and African forests over the past decade.

The latest stockpile of scales was seized at a port in the southern city of Shenzhen this July and likely taken from between 20,000 to 30,000 slaughtere­d pangolins, state media reported on Wednesday.

The state-run newspaper said this marked the “largest volume of any single case found by border inspectors.”

Police have arrested two suspects, surnamed Li and He, who used fake names to register their packages for import, state-run media said.

The suspects declared the packages empty, but were using charcoalst­uffed bags to cover nearly 250 sacks of pangolin scales.

On Li’s mobile phone, police found photos of pangolin scales that were taken in an African country.

He denied taking the photos, claiming to have recently pur- chased the phone secondhand just prior to being taken in for questionin­g in September.

But one of the investigat­ors noticed that a mole on Li’s left foot matched one that appeared on a foot in one of the photos with the pangolin scales.

Investigat­ors also found transac - lion yuan ($758,000) between Li an unnamed African country.

Pangolins are under state protection in China, where some believe the animal’s scales have medici evidence to support the claim. Eating pangolins is punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

The profit- margin is high for smugglers bringing pangolins into China or Vietnam from Africa, where it can be procured at low prices and then sold in Asia as a delicacy.

A ban on global pangolin trade went into effect at the start of this year.

In September, China’s Wildlife Protection Associatio­n collabo on a video campaign starring Jackie Chan, in which the martial arts superstar urged viewers to say “no” to eating, using and buying pangolin products.

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