Ivory haul seized in Siem Reap
Two Vietnamese nationals arrested at Siem Reap International
Airport on Sunday night were officially charged by the provincial court
yesterday for attempting to smuggle nearly 80 kilograms of elephant
ivory into the country, officials said yesterday.
“We went to Siem Reap International Airport [on Sunday] night at 9pm,
and we arrested them after we discovered 79.5 kilograms of ivory in
their luggage,” Sophanha said, adding that provincial police, customs
officials and other authorities had cooperated to make the arrests.
“We charged them with illegally smuggling elephant ivory, and they are now detained in jail,” he added.
Sophanha said yesterday that he was not sure which country the ivory
was ultimately destined for, but Siem Reap provincial deputy police
chief Um Amra said that the haul had been headed to Vietnam to be put up
for sale there. “[The suspects] said that they planned to transport
that ivory to Hanoi,” Amra said.
“This is the first case in Siem Reap province of illegally smuggling
ivory since I became a deputy police chief five years ago,” he added,
noting that traffickers in his province typically smuggled drugs.
However, two sizeable ivory shipments destined for Cambodia have been
seized in Thailand in the past two years. Eleven elephant tusks headed
from Ethiopia to Phnom Penh were intercepted there in December of 2012,
and a whopping 27 tusks – with a black market value of $498,000 –were
seized there last September en route from Angola to Siem Reap.
The growing trade was highlighted in a 2012 report by the Convention
on International Trade in Endangered Species of Flora and Fauna, which
warned that Cambodia could be replacing Vietnam as the customary transit
point for ivory in the region.
“Use of Cambodia’s Sihanoukville Port … as an export destination for
ivory from Africa appears to be an emerging substitute trade route to
China following the series of large seizures in Vietnam,” the report
reads, noting that China and Thailand were the top destinations for
large ivory shipments seized in the previous three years.
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