Posts tagged ‘bear’

December 22, 2010

Police: Tons of animals smuggled through Vietnam

Cached:  http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4002851,00.html

Published: 12.22.10, 11:19 / Israel News

Police in Vietnam say an estimated 4,500 tons of wild animals, mostly snakes, turtles and pangolins, have been smuggled through the Southeast Asian country during the past year.

Lt. Col. Vu Duyen Hai of the Department of Environmental Police says the animals are smuggled in from Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Myanmar and taken through Vietnam before heading to China where they are eaten as delicacies or used in traditional medicines. (AP)

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Thousands of tons of smuggled animals transit Vietnam annually

Monsters and Critics.com

Cached: http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/asiapacific/news/article_1607274.php/Thousands-of-tons-of-smuggled-animals-transit-Vietnam-annually

Dec 22, 2010, 3:48 GMT

Hanoi – Vietnamese police on Wednesday said they estimated 4,500 tons of wild animals are smuggled through the country every year.

The information was released at a conference to fight wild animal trading in Hanoi on Tuesday, said Colonel Luong Minh Thao, vice director of the Department for Environmental Police.

The estimate was ‘based on many sources, both data from Vietnamese police, customs and data distributed by other countries,’ said Lieutenant Colonel Vu Duyen Hai of the Department for Environmental Police.

Hai said more than 3,000 out of 4,500 tons of wild animals transported from Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia and Thailand transited Vietnam before heading to China. The rest was probably consumed domestically, he added.

Popular wild animal parts illegally traded include primates, bears, pangolins, elephant tusks, rhino’s horns and snakes.

‘It is very difficult to say if the number of wild animal cases trafficked is rising or falling,’ Hai said. ‘But clearly, wild animal smugglers are operating in a more sophisticated and secret manner.’

Consumption of wild animals in homes and restaurants is widespread in China and Vietnam, where they are considered a delicacy, despite laws granting many animals protected status. The animals are often associated with health benefits in traditional medicinal beliefs.