https://today.rtl.lu/news/science-and-environment/a/1311855.html
ILLEGAL IVORY TRADE
AFP | Update: 26.02.2019 00:00
The body of a male Asian elephant was found in a wildlife sanctuary in
northeastern Cambodia on Sunday / © Cambodian Ministry of Environment/AFP
An elephant has been found dead with its tusks and tail sliced off in a
wildlife sanctuary in Cambodia, where wild elephant numbers have dwindled to
just a few hundred due to poaching and deforestation.
The Southeast Asian nation has emerged in recent years as a key transit hub
for the multi-billion dollar illicit wildlife trade, with demand for
products made from tusks, pangolin scales and rhino horns high in China and
neighbouring Vietnam.
According to the Mondulkiri Project, an animal rescue NGO, there are about
400 elephants in the wild in Cambodia, and about 50 held in captivity.
The body of the male Asian elephant was found on Sunday in a wildlife
sanctuary in northeastern Mondulkiri province, said Environment Ministry
spokesman Neth Pheaktra.
“The elephant’s tusks were missing and its tail was also cut off,” he told
AFP on Monday, adding the animal was killed about 10 days ago.
“There was a wound from a gunshot under its right eye,” Neth Pheaktra said,
adding authorities are still hunting for the poachers.
A baby elephant was found dead last year in the same sanctuary when it was
caught in a trap set by poachers, he said.
The Asian elephant is hunted for its precious tusks, while its tail hair is
considered lucky and embedded in rings and bracelets.
The demand for the animal parts threatens Cambodia’s dwindling elephant
population found in the northeast and southwest forests, where illegal
logging and deforestation is reducing their habitat.
Cambodia’s high levels of corruption and lax law enforcement make the
country an easy transit point for traffickers facing a crackdown in
neighbouring Thailand.
In December, Cambodian authorities seized more than one thousand elephant
tusks hidden in a storage container sent from Mozambique, the country’s
largest ever ivory bust.
Another significant haul occurred in 2016 when authorities discovered nearly
a tonne of ivory hidden in hollowed-out logs inside an abandoned container
— also owned by a company based in Mozambique.
Reblogged this on Committee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog.
Just shoot the goddamn poachers, if and when they are caught. There needs to be the harshest consequences for these poachers. Humans are a dime a dozen….
especially poachers.
It doesn’t look good for the world’s wildlife. 😦 What a plague on the world humanity is.
I wonder what humans will do when there is no more ivory, or how they will react when elephants and rhinos have gone extinct because of them. Extinction never bothered them in the past, I suppose. And if history is any indication, what ivory remains will probably sell for astronomical prices, and people will kill each other over it, and may resort to pulling out their own eye teeth. Good!