Hanoi (VNA) - Malaysia has seizedscales from pangolins worth up to 9.2 million MYR (over two million USD), thelargest haul in the country, at Kuala Lumpur airport, officials said on May 8.
Customs officials discovered 712kg of scales at the airport's cargo warehouse,where they had been shipped in 18 sacks using false documents, CustomsDepartment Assistant Director-General Paddy Abdul Halim said.
An estimated 1,400 pangolins had been killed to produce the amount of scalesseized, according to the Malaysia Wildlife and National Parks Department.
The scales were shipped from Africa in two separate shipments, Paddy said. Thefirst shipment from Accra, Ghana, was sent to Malaysia via Dubai, the UnitedArab Emirates, on an Emirates Airlines flight, which was seized on May 2.
The second was sent from Kinshaha, Congo, on a Kenya Airways flight to Nairobi,Kenya, where it was then transferred to an Emirates Airlines flight and shippedto Malaysia via Dubai. It was confiscated on May 4.
Malaysian authorised agencies are still investigating whether the two shipmentsare linked. No suspects have been detained.
Global trade in pangolin scales is banned under a convention of the United Nations,but they are prized in some Asian countries for use in traditional medicines.-VNA
Customs officials discovered 712kg of scales at the airport's cargo warehouse,where they had been shipped in 18 sacks using false documents, CustomsDepartment Assistant Director-General Paddy Abdul Halim said.
An estimated 1,400 pangolins had been killed to produce the amount of scalesseized, according to the Malaysia Wildlife and National Parks Department.
The scales were shipped from Africa in two separate shipments, Paddy said. Thefirst shipment from Accra, Ghana, was sent to Malaysia via Dubai, the UnitedArab Emirates, on an Emirates Airlines flight, which was seized on May 2.
The second was sent from Kinshaha, Congo, on a Kenya Airways flight to Nairobi,Kenya, where it was then transferred to an Emirates Airlines flight and shippedto Malaysia via Dubai. It was confiscated on May 4.
Malaysian authorised agencies are still investigating whether the two shipmentsare linked. No suspects have been detained.
Global trade in pangolin scales is banned under a convention of the United Nations,but they are prized in some Asian countries for use in traditional medicines.-VNA
VNA