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Endangered species under threat from richer China
CHINA: November 5, 2001
HONG KONG - Growing prosperity in China
has led to an insatiable demand for things exotic, and endangered
animal and plant species from southeast Asia are coming under
increasing threat, conservation experts said last week.
Cobra, box turtles, crocodiles, pangolin and freshwater turtles
are widely hunted in places such as Indonesia, Thailand and Malaysia
to satisfy palates in southern China, particularly Guangdong,
they said.
Plants such as rare orchids, with roots said to bring health
benefits, have also become part of the illegal trade.
The clandestine business came to the fore this week when customs
officials in Hong Kong seized some 2,700 kg of pangolin scales
hidden in 45 bags in a container that was believed to have been
bound for mainland China.
The cargo, from Surabaya in Indonesia, was valued at HK$1.35
million (US$173,000). Scales of the pangolin, or anteater, are
used in traditional Chinese medicine to cure skin diseases.
Authorities are still investigating the case.
An expert from Hong Kong's Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation
Department said the illegal trade in the region has become more
rampant since Asia's financial crisis in 1997.
"With the recession, more people (in southeast Asia) have
turned to wildlife, to natural resources to make a living,"
said Cheung Chi-sun, an endangered species protection officer.
"And in China, when they get richer, they start eating and
using more things. First around themselves, and when they can't
get enough, they turn to overseas," he added.
FEW SPARED
While China has its own pangolin and box turtles, these have
been relentlessly hunted over the years and are now no longer
able to sustain domestic commercial demand.
As a result, Chinese demand for box turtles and snakes, such
as the common and king cobra from southeast Asia, have soared
over the last five years, said another conservationist.
"The box turtles are the most threatened. The Chinese buy
from southeast Asia, even America," said Lee Kwok-shing at
the Kadoorie Farm and Botanic Garden in Hong Kong.
"I don't think it's true that eating the box turtles will
bring any special benefits. It has the same effect as eating chicken
or pork. We really need to stop it urgently."
Conservationists, however, agree that seizures of endangered
species in Hong Kong have declined in recent years due to successful
enforcement and stiff penalties.
Importing undeclared cargo carries a maximum fine of HK$2 million
and seven years' jail. Importing endangered species without a
licence carries a HK$500,000 fine and a year's jail.
Story by Tan Ee Lyn
(Copyright Reuters Limited 2001)
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