Over 13kg smuggled rhino horns seized at HCMC airport The authorities of Ho Chi Minh City’s Tan Son Nhat International Airport on Monday evening detected over 13 kilograms of African rhino horns being smuggled via the airport.

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Accordingly, A Vietnamese man named V.C.L was caught red-handed hiding 5 African rhino horns and some pieces of rhino horns weighing about 13.1 kilograms in total in his luggage, according to the airport’s customs officers and officers from Police Department of Criminal Investigation in Economic Management and Positions (C46B).


The smuggled package may worth up to VND15 billion, or $750,000, said the officers.


Since rhino is listed as “critically endangered” in the list of world’s endangered, vulnerable, and threatened animal, the horns of rhino is banned from imported into Vietnam in any form following the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) and Decision No.11/2013/QD-TTg signed by the Prime Minister on January 24, 2013.


There’re currently around 28,000 rhinos left in the wild and the five rhino species mostly inhabit Africa and Asia. In 2013, up to 946 rhinos were killed for their horns in Africa alone.


According to the Wildlife Department under the Humane Society International, since the beginning of 2013, at least 746 rhinos have been killed for their horns in South Africa, which has the highest concentration of rhinos in the world. Many of the horns were transported to Asia, including Vietnam, according to the the Vietnam News Agency.


Meanwhile, more than 1,000 rhinos were poached for their horns in South Africa in 2013, a record number and an increase of over 50 percent from the previous year, Reuters quoted the spokesperson of the country’s department of environmental affairs as saying.


Rhino hunting is driven by soaring demand in newly affluent Asian countries such as Vietnam and China, where the animal’s horns are prized as a key ingredient in traditional medicine, Reuters reported.


The last rhino in Vietnam was killed in 2010, which is a tragic lesson in protecting wild species on the verge of extinction, VNA reported.









Since Jan 15, 2014, local buses has begun to convey messages warning people against the trading and transport of rhino horns in efforts to combat rampant rhino poaching. The messages are designed to boost bus passengers’ and others’ awareness that those trading and transporting the horns can face six month to seven year imprisonment.


This is one of the joint initiatives from 2013 to 2016 by the Vietnam Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) and the Humane Society International to put curbs on the rampant slaying of the endangered animal for its horns.





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