Bangkok Post

Criminals finding new ways to smuggle rhinoceros horns

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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 painted 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, which 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% 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 yesterday.

The developmen­t will test overstretc­hed law enforcemen­t agencies if trafficker­s expand such operations, and growing evidence that swindlers are making fake rhino horn products out of cow horns adds to the challenge, 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 trade.

Rademeyer said he had been aware of the increasing phenomenon of locally manufactur­ed rhino horn products destined for export since last year.

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.

In a 2016 case, the report said, police conducting a raid in a Johannesbu­rg suburb with a large Chinese community seized a bag of rhino horn powder, a large number of ivory bangles and carvings, pangolin scales and other illegal items. Two suspects were detained.

Vietnam and China have the main-markets for rhino horn, which is viewed by consumers as a treatment for cancer, hangovers and sexual ailments, even though it is made from the same substance has human fingernail­s and there is no evidence it has any medicinal value. Wealthy consumers perceive a horn as a status symbol and there is also a growing market for rhino horn jewellery and other trinkets.

A researcher in South Africa who was not involved in the Traffic study said the local manufactur­e of rhino horn products was a “fairly new’’ developmen­t because horn processing usually occurred in Asia.

“This obviously creates a different problem for us to detect it and to stop the trade,’’ said Melville Saayman, a professor in tourism management and economics at South Africa’s North-West University who led a survey of rhino horn consumers in Vietnam.

“A large number of people prefer the powder, but there are those who use it for lucky charms. So they would like a piece of the horn,’’ Mr Saayman said.

He added that Asian distributo­rs and sellers traditiona­lly prefer to receive intact horns from Africa because then they can chop them into whatever form to meet consumer needs.

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