The Mercury

Arrests a major blow to global illegal ivory traffickin­g operations

- MERCURY CORRESPOND­ENT

THREE men said to be involved in running a major internatio­nal ivory smuggling syndicate have been caught following action by the China Customs Anti-Smuggling Bureau.

The trio were first exposed in the July 2017 report, The Shuidong Connection: Exposing the Global Hub of the Illegal Ivory Trade, by the London-based Environmen­tal Investigat­ion Agency (EIA).

After almost three years of undercover work, EIA investigat­ors infiltrate­d one of the leading syndicates based in the obscure Chinese town of Shuidong, said to be a major Chinese hub for poached ivory smuggled from Africa.

The Shuidong Connection identified the three people said to be the main culprits in the syndicate as Wang, Xie and Ou; and the EIA shared its findings with the relevant Chinese government agencies in a confidenti­al briefing before the report’s publicatio­n.

Enforcemen­t action based on that intelligen­ce was launched by the local Anti-Smuggling Bureau on July 6, 2017, when about 500 officers raided locations in Shuidong and surroundin­g areas. Wang was caught during this raid and jailed for 15 years; Xie was located in Tanzania and voluntaril­y returned to face trial, and was later jailed for six years.

Chinese authoritie­s have also confirmed that Ou was repatriate­d from Nigeria on January 5 under an Interpol Red Notice. He will now face trial in China. EIA campaigns director Julian Newman said: “We are very pleased to see such robust enforcemen­t action taken by the Chinese authoritie­s in response to the informatio­n provided by our investigat­ors.

“During the investigat­ion, this syndicate had claimed involvemen­t in multiple shipments of illegal ivory from Africa to China, and had been directly involved in the trade for years, so dismantlin­g the operation has put a major dent in global illegal ivory traffickin­g operations.”

Meanwhile, Environmen­tal Affairs Minister Nomvula Mokonyane has welcomed the recovery of more than 30 pieces of rhino horn at OR Tambo Internatio­nal Airport last Wednesday.

“The discovery and seizure of the rhino horn, estimated to be worth more than R23 million, is a feather in the cap of enforcemen­t agencies working to rid the airport, and our country, of wildlife-related crimes,” Mokonyane said.

Police announced that the seizure was part of an operation into ridding the airport of criminal activities.

 ?? | REUTERS African News Agency (ANA) ?? DURING the investigat­ion, the syndicate had claimed involvemen­t in multiple shipments of illegal ivory from Africa to China, and had been directly involved in the trade for years.
| REUTERS African News Agency (ANA) DURING the investigat­ion, the syndicate had claimed involvemen­t in multiple shipments of illegal ivory from Africa to China, and had been directly involved in the trade for years.

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