Hong Kong
authorities confiscated $3.4 million ($26.7 million in Hong Kong
currency) worth of ivory found in two shipping containers this week.
The illegal goods weighed more than 8,000 pounds, making it one of the biggest seizures of ivory in Hong Kong.
The
containers arrived from Tanzania and Kenya, according to Hong Kong
customs officials. The agency seized a total of 1,209 pieces of ivory
tusks and three pounds of ivory ornaments from the two containers.
iHong
Kong Customs was on alert after a tip-off from Guangdong officials in
China. On October 16, Hong Kong officers inspected a container from
Tanzania claiming to carry plastic scrap and found $1.7 million worth of
ivory. A day later, a second container from Kenya was seized with ivory
valued at $1.7 million, according to Hong Kong Customs.
Seven
people, including one Hong Kong resident, have been arrested by Chinese
authorities in connection to the cases, said a customs spokeswoman.
Hong Kong
is viewed as a transit point for the illegal ivory trade, feeding into
increasing demands in China, according to a Time article published this
week.
Elephants
are being killed in Africa at an alarming rate as international demand
soars for ivory. Much of the demand comes from increasingly affluent
Asian countries, particularly China and Thailand.
The last
major bust in Hong Kong occurred in 2011, when officials seized a
shipment of ivory and rhino horns valued at $2.2 million in Hong Kong
dollars. Priest embroiled in ivory smuggling controversy. Will elephants
still roam earth in 20 years?
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