Customs Interpts Sacks Of Pangolins, Elephant Tusks Worth Over N22bn

Operatives of the Nigeria Customs Service, NCS, have busted a network of pangolin scales exporters, after they raided a house in Lagos.

According to a statement released today by the Wildlife Justice Commission, the raid, which was aided by intelligence made available by the Commission, took place on Thursday, 28 July, 2021, and led to the arrest of three suspects and seizure of 196 sacks containing 7,137 kg of pangolin scales, 4.6 kg of pangolin claws and 846.34 kg of ivory.

TheFact Nigeria gathers that additional suspects are being sought in respect to this seizure, some of whom are believed to have already fled Nigeria.

This is the ninth largest seizure of pangolin scales between 2019 and 2021.

According to the statement, the arrested suspects are part of a well-known transnational criminal network operating in West Africa.

They are linked to approximately 50% of all major pangolin scale seizures over the past three years.

“These arrests have severely disrupted this network”, the statement said.

Meanwhile the Commission’s Director of Programs, Steve Carmody, has congratulated the NCS for thier quick response resulting in “this outstanding outcome against a well-established transnational organised crime network”.

“The truly horrific reality of this seizure is that even at seven tonnes, there were still eight other larger seizures in the last three years, and this network was responsible for at least half of them. We look forward to the arrest of the other wanted subjects and seeing proceeds of crime provisions applied to seize the ill-gotten gains of this network”, Carmody said.

Large-scale and sustained trafficking of pangolin scales, sourced for jewellery and as a component of traditional Chinese medicine, is driving the species to the brink of extinction.

 

During 2020, Wildlife Justice Commission investigators were offered staggering quantities of pangolin scales, outnumbering the offers of ivory across all the organisation’s investigations for the first time.

This fact demonstrates the continued availability of pangolin scales and ongoing marketplace demand, despite COVID-19 travelling restrictions.

The Wildlife Justice Commission had also identified that wildlife traders were stockpiling their products in order to resume trade as soon as restrictions were eased, a concern that has now been justified by seizures of massive amounts of pangolin scales such as this one.

The Wildlife Justice Commission had pointed out in recent reports that pangolin scales are increasingly substituted for, and trafficked alongside, ivory, a trend that the organisation already identified in 2019.

As ivory prices fall, traffickers are increasingly turning to pangolin scales; in combined shipments, the proportion of pangolin scales has surpassed the volume of ivory.

“This operation is a great example of how transnational wildlife crimes should be investigated and the tangible results that public-private partnerships can achieve by working together to disrupt organised crime,” said Carmody.

Carmody affirmed that the operation was a major victory for law enforcement and for the Wildlife Justice Commission, but warned, “we must acknowledge that other actors will rise to take the place of those recently arrested”.

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