Kenyan wildlife authorities have impounded nearly $1 million worth of elephant tusks and rhino horns smuggled by poachers from southern Africa and bound for illegal ivory markets in Asia.

Ivory_trade
The ivory trade has targeted the African continent for decades

This marks one of Africa's biggest ivory hauls. Sniffer dogs found the nearly 300kg of ivory at Nairobi's Jomo Kenyatta Airport in cargo crates coming from Mozambique on a Kenya Airways flight, the director of Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) told reporters late on Tuesday.

"It's a sad moment. Remember all wildlife wherever it is, is a world heritage. So if we lose any, it's a loss to all of us as a human race," Julius Kipng'etich said.

The discovery of the consignment of ivory is a result of increased efforts to curb the export of poached ivory and in so doing restrict the trade in such goods.

Kipng'etich said the animals must have been poached from southern African countries like Tanzania, Zimbabwe or South Africa as Mozambique had no rhinos and hardly any elephants.

According to the WWF conservation group, the whole continent has about 18,000 rhinos left, while sub-Saharan Africa has 690,000 elephants at most -- where once they were millions.

Ivory demand in Asia is stimulating poaching by international criminal rings, wildlife experts say.

Kipng'etich said the illegal shipment was bound for Laos, but that China was more likely to be the final destination.

"From our own experience of movement of wildlife trophies, definitely this was going to China," he said.

Rhino horns are used in traditional Chinese medicine where many people believe it can cure arthritis and fever.

Elsewhere, ivory is in demand for carving into dagger-handles and other ornaments.

Kipng'etich said a kilo of rhino horn was worth $5,000 on the black market, while a kilo of ivory sold for $3,000 a kilo, meaning the haul in Kenya of 280kg of elephant ivory and 18kg of rhino horn worth almost $1 million.

Reuters


(4 Votes)

News by Country

Sorry, you need to install flash to see this content. Click here.

Newsletter

Daily Email Updates

RSS Feeds

Site managed by raramuridesign