SEEJ-AFRICA THUMBNAIL:
- On January 11th, 2022, Vietnamese authorities at Tien Sa Port, Da Nang, seized 6.2 tonnes of pangolin scales and 456 kg of elephant ivory from a container that had arrived from Nigeria.
- The container was said to contain cashew nuts, a cover load that was last seen in April 2020 when just over 6 tonnes of pangolin scales were seized at Port Klang, Malaysia. The country of origin was never published but heavily believed to be Nigeria.
- In 2021, there were three seizures in Nigeria, one with a confirmed destination of Haiphong, Vietnam and total combined contraband amount of 16,914 kg of pangolin scales and 1,300 kg of ivory. Arrests were made in the July and October seizures bases on intelligence provided by the Wildlife Justice Commission
Vietnam seizes over 6 tonnes of suspected ivory, pangolin scales smuggled from Nigeria | Tuoi Tre News
More than 6.6 metric tons of suspected ivory and pangolin scales were seized by customs officers from a suspicious container recently shipped from Nigeria to Tien Sa Port in Da Nang, Vietnam.
The customs declaration claimed its contents to be cashew nuts, but upon opening the container, officers found suspected endangered animal parts, including 456 kilograms of ivory and around 6.2 metric tons of pangolin scales, local customs officials reported on Thursday.
The discovery was made during an inspection on Tuesday after customs officers at the port declared the container, which arrived at Tien Sa on January 5, as ‘suspicious.’
The Da Nang customs, in conjunction with other relevant agencies, have launched an investigation into the alleged smuggling.
They are currently tracking the enterprises and individuals responsible for the container.
Those involved in the case will be prosecuted, radio station Voice of Vietnam cited Tran Van Anh, deputy detector of the Da Nang Customs Department.
Endangered wildlife products are strictly banned from being traded in, imported to or exported from Vietnam as they are protected by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), to which the country has been party since 1994.
Several cases of smuggling wildlife products have been detected at Tien Sa Port in recent years, all shipped from Africa.
In October 2018, local customs officers found some six metric tons of pangolin scales and around two metric tons of tusks stashed among recycled plastics in a container also consigned from Nigeria.
In March 2019, more than 9.1 metric tons of ivory was discovered in a shipment delivered from the Congo, with the tusks hidden among timber.
In July 2021, a shipment declared as wood but containing 138 kilograms of rhino horn and around 3.1 metric tons of wildlife bones arrived at the port from South Africa.