Corporate News
A KWS officer views some of the elephant tusks found in a container at
the port of Mombasa on July 9,2013. Kenyan customs officials have
intercepted 260 kilogrammes of ivory at the Swissport Cargo shed at Jomo
Kenyatta International Airport FILE | NATION
By STELLA CHERONO
In Summary
- Customs officials Friday intercepted 260 kilogrammes of ivory at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport.
- The ivory was being smuggled to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, with a fake customs entry document.
About 260kgs of ivory have been seized at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA), Nairobi.
The ivory was packed in 12 cartons which also contained carvings and was to be transported to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Deputy Commander, Kenya Airports Police Unit,
Douglas Kirocho said the cargo was delivered to the Swissport Cargo
Terminal by G4S employees on Thursday and booked for transportation with
Turkish Airlines.
"When security personnel scanned the packages, they
detected a suspicious commodity and that is when we decided to open
them today in the morning and check," Mr Kirocho said.
"We discovered that they contained 1,356 pieces that had been painted in black and brown," he said.
Mr Kirocho said the ivory with an estimated street
value of Sh33.8 million had been cross-checked by the Kenya Wildlife
services. A recent survey suggests the ivory could fetch as much as Sh47
million in Beijing, a prime market.
Police are yet to confirm whether the ivory originated from Kenya or it was on transit through JKIA.
JKIA Customs Manager, Justus Nyamache told the Nation that the cargo unit has become more alert following the increase in cases of illegal consignments.
"We have learnt the tricks used by criminals to
transport drugs, ivory and other things and we will not allow them to
prosper," Mr Nyamache said.
The number of people arrested for being in
possession of ivory continues to rise despite the tough penalties put in
place to curb poaching.
On Wednesday, a Chinese woman was arrested at the
JKIA as she tried to smuggle ivory worth Sh1.2million to Hong Kong. She
had misrepresented her cargo as macadamia nuts.
The poaching of elephants for their ivory tusks and
rhinos for their horns has been on the rise in Kenya, with the country
also acting as a conduit for smuggled ivory en route to Asian counties.
According to an Interpol report, global large-scale
ivory seizures hit record levels last year, with many of them occurring
in Kenya and the East African region.
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