Woman admits to selling NC black bear parts prized in China for treating illnesses

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Hunting bear in the Carolinas

Bear hunting is a big tradition that attracts sportsmen from around the southeast to the Carolinas. 

A woman this week admitted she illegally bought and sold North Carolina black bear body parts that have been used for centuries in China, South Korea and other countries to treat illnesses.

Kathy Ann Cho acknowledged in a court filing signed by her lawyer that she illegally bought ginseng and bear gallbladders in the North Carolina mountains and sold them in Georgia, according to the court document obtained by The Charlotte Observer.

Cho acknowledged purchasing l3 black bear gallbladders in Franklin, NC, for $5,200, or $400 each, and selling one of them for $1,000, according to the document filed in U.S. District Court in Asheville by the Charlotte-based office of U.S. Attorney Andrew Murray.

Cho was charged under the federal Lacey Act of 1900, which prohibits transporting illegally harvested fish, wildlife and plants across state lines.

Cho’s lawyer, Fredilyn Sison, is with the Federal Public Defender’s Office in Asheville. An office spokesman said Friday that federal public defenders are barred by law from commenting about active cases.

An undercover agent with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service began arranging purchases with Cho in 2014, after the service learned she was selling illegally harvested ginseng in Georgia, court records show. Court documents do not list where Cho lives.

“During multiple subsequent meetings and recorded conversations, Cho acknowledged she was purchasing ginseng and bear gall bladders from others in North Carolina and selling both in Georgia,” federal prosecutors wrote in the filing.

ginsengroot
Seized ginseng shows the orange stain that marked roots grown in federally protected forests. JEFF WILLHELMCHARLOTTE OBSERVER FILE PHOTO

The court document does not identify Cho’s buyers or what they intended to do with the gallbladders.

Bear bile stored in the animal’s gallbladder “has been a popular ingredient in traditional Chinese medicine for 3,000 years,” according to the website of the Animal Legal & Historical Center at Michigan State University. “It has been used to cure various ailments, such as fever, gall stones, liver problems, heart disease, and eye irritation.”

The bile can sell for about $185 per pound in China, with an average wild bear gallbladder demanding about $10,000 in South Korea, according to the center.

Such poaching of bear gallbladders has occurred for many years in U.S. forests and parks.

In 2010, for instance, rangers in Virginia’s Prince William Park found the body of a yearling bear cub whose gallbladder had been removed, The Los Angeles Times reported at the time.

Cho’s plea hearing is scheduled for May 31 in U.S. District Court in Asheville, court records show.

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Seizure of 14 Tons of Pangolin Scales in Singapore Sets a Dismal Record

Sacks containing pangolin scales that were seized last week in Singapore.CreditNational Parks Board Singapore, via Reuters
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Sacks containing pangolin scales that were seized last week in Singapore.CreditCreditNational Parks Board Singapore, via Reuters

HONG KONG — Singapore has discovered more than 14 tons of pangolin scales in what conservation specialists called the largest such seizure of a single shipment worldwide, highlighting the stubbornness of the illegal trade of the scaly anteater.

Roughly 36,000 pangolins were believed to have been killed for the shipment, according to Paul Thomson, an official with the Pangolin Specialist Group, an organization belonging to the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The group called it the biggest seizure of pangolin scales on record.

“The news of this record-shattering seizure is deeply alarming and underscores the fact that pangolins are facing a crisis,” Mr. Thomson said of the seizure on Wednesday. “If we don’t stop the illegal wildlife trade, pangolins face the risk of going extinct.”

Pangolins are believed to be the most frequently illegally trafficked mammal in the world, with an estimated 300 of them poached every day on average. The International Union for Conservation of Nature has declared all eight species as “threatened with extinction” since 2014, while two species are critically endangered.

Specialists say that the pangolin’s defense against predators, which is to curl itself into a ball, has made it an easy target for hunters.

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This pup was born at our Wildlife Release Station. Mother, Lucy, lost two feet after getting caught in a poacher’s snare. Father, Thom, was brought to WRS in May 2018 after escaping a wildlife trader. When ready he will be released
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Singaporean customs officials and the country’s national parks board said in a statement that the scales, which had been shipped from Nigeria, were headed to Vietnam, home to the second-most lucrative black market for pangolin scales, after China.

In Vietnam, many see pangolin meat as a luxury that conveys social status and health benefits, according to a survey conducted by WildAid in 2015.

A pangolin rescued from poachers in South Africa. Pangolins are believed to be the most frequently illegally trafficked mammals in the world, with an estimated 300 of them poached every day on average.CreditDenis Farrell/Associated Press
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A pangolin rescued from poachers in South Africa. Pangolins are believed to be the most frequently illegally trafficked mammals in the world, with an estimated 300 of them poached every day on average.CreditDenis Farrell/Associated Press

International laws forbid trafficking of all pangolin species, and techniques such as fingerprint forensics seek to deter poachers, but recent seizures have shown that the pangolin is still heavily trafficked around the world.

In February, 33 tons of pangolin meat were seized in two processing facilities in Malaysia, according to Traffic, a wildlife conservation group. Earlier that month, the Hong Kong authorities intercepted a nine-ton shipment of pangolin scales and a thousand elephant tusks.

When Singaporean officials intercepted the pangolin scale shipment last Wednesday, they also found nearly 400 pounds of carved ivory, officials said.

To confront a wild boar invasion, Hong Kong turns to birth control

To confront a wild boar invasion, Hong Kong turns to birth control
A man walks past wild boars in Hong Kong’s Aberdeen Park in January. (Anthony Wallace / AFP/ Getty Images)

Out of the darkness appeared a snout.

Fei zhu! Fat pig!” 8-year-old Shino Chen shouted to her younger brother as she jumped up and down and pointed at a wild boar.

The hairy black pig, which must have weighed at least 150 pounds, grunted and snuffled through a flimsy, old fence along the sidewalk. The children tiptoed toward the animal then sprinted back to their father’s side.

Kenneth Chen, 44, and his children visit the boars almost every night. All they have to do is step out of their apartment here in the neighborhood of Tai Wai, located on the fringes of an ever-expanding metropolis.

“I bring my kids to see a natural habitat because they seldom get to see live animals in Hong Kong,” Chen said.

Hong Kong’s 7.4 million residents spend most of their days rushing between high-rises, metro stations, tiny apartments and air-conditioned offices. People occupy less than a quarter of the 426-square-mile region, making its urban core one of the most densely populated places in the world.

The rest of Hong Kong belongs to monkeys, snakes, porcupines, boars and other wildlife.

The city is a concrete jungle in the middle of an actual jungle.

Now, as urban areas sprawl into the surrounding hills, Hong Kong is struggling to contain a wild boar problem.

The pigs are everywhere: sprinting down the highway, digging into dumpsters, falling through the ceiling of a children’s clothing store, sauntering into metro stations, taking over barbecues, confronting police at the airport, even swimming across the balmy bays of Hong Kong Island.

No one has conducted a census to determine the actual number of wild boars in Hong Kong. But encounters reported to local authorities have more than doubled in the last five years, from 294 in 2013 to 679 in the first 10 months of 2018 alone.

There have also been injuries: A 70-year-old man was hospitalized last week after he threw a stone at a wild boar and the animal retaliated by biting him.

The classic solution for boar overpopulation in most places, including California, is hunting. Hong Kong once licensed hunters to kill boars, especially in rural areas where farmers often complained about the animals uprooting their crops.

Boars have also provoked anger for lurking around cemeteries, waiting to eat food that people leave on graves to honor deceased relatives in accordance with Chinese tradition.

But Hong Kong’s government suspended boar hunting in 2017 in response to an outcry by animal rights activists.

Roni Wong, the 35-year-old founder of the Hong Kong Wild Boar Concern Group, has spearheaded public confrontations with hunters, shouting at them to desist from harming the pigs.

“It is very cruel, not civilized behavior to do that,” Wong explained.

He says that humans and boars can peacefully coexist as long as people follow a few basic rules: “We always educate the public, don’t feed the wild boars or make them angry. Just leave them and they won’t attack.”

On the other side of the debate are activists who say defenders of the boars are naive.

“They actually have absolutely no idea how dangerous these animals are,” said Wesley Ho, spokesman for Feral Pig Hong Kong, a group formed last year to demand stronger action against the pigs.

Hong Kong residents take a photo in front of a wild boar at a park.
Hong Kong residents take a photo in front of a wild boar at a park. (Vincent Yu / Associated Press)

Killing boars isn’t wrong when it’s necessary for protection, he said.

“They may not attack 100 times, but the 101st time, they could, and those attacks could be fatal,” Ho said. “No matter what, human lives are the most precious thing. They come first in any case.”

He said many Hong Kongers are afraid to go camping or have picnics, because gluttonous boars are encroaching on human space and stealing food. “Looking at them, they’re so fat,” he said. “How hungry can they be?”

Searching for a compromise, politicians have suggested different tactics for the boar problem, including introducing natural predators into Hong Kong or sending the boars to nearby islands.

But wild boars are strong swimmers, and their predators — tigers and wolves, among other carnivores — wouldn’t exactly fit the urban landscape either.

For now, the city’s solution is birth control.

A team of veterinarians recently launched a two-year pilot sterilization program that starts with tracking down boars and shooting them with tranquilizer darts.

It takes 15 minutes for the darts to kick in, giving the hogs ample time to freak out before they collapse.

“Sometimes it’s in the middle of the city center, like a big pig in a small area and it’s very challenging,” said Karthi Martelli, one of the vets.

Then the females are injected with a 3-year contraceptive and, along with the males, released back into Hong Kong’s country parks.

It’s not a perfect system, Martelli acknowledged. But so far nobody has invented a more humane option.

“Can you imagine caging a [330-pound] wild boar?” she said. “They have tusks. There is no real cage that can hold them for a few days. So we need to come up with a method of sterilization that’s minimally invasive.”

The biggest problem in Hong Kong is not that boars or humans are hurting each other, she said, but that too many people find the pigs adorable and decide to feed them.

It doesn’t help that 2019 is the Chinese Year of the Pig and that some consider boar sightings a sign of good luck and prosperity.

“It was really cute once upon a time, but I mean, wild pigs running loose in a city center is not very exciting anymore,” Martelli said.

Her husband, Paolo Martelli, who is also a veterinarian, pointed out that the invading species is the human, not the boar.

“They’ve always been here,” he said.

Now the boars are eating more, reproducing more, and living an unhealthy urbanized life, Karthi Martelli added: “It’s a man-made problem but the pigs are paying the price.”

Her advice: The best way of protecting animal and human alike is to disengage.

But that is becoming harder as development presses into the wild lands.

With more people moving to Hong Kong from other parts of China, developers built 21,000 new homes last year, the most in 14 years.

Many were in the New Territories, a largely rural area that stretches north to mainland China. New train routes are also under construction, carving deeper into areas once inhabited only by wildlife.

Tai Wai, which is in the New Territories, was a farming village until the late 1970s. There are signs warning people not to bother the animals, but not everybody obeys.

As the Chen family marveled at one boar, another local resident, 36-year-old Wai-ling Tang, came walking down the street when she was startled by another boar wiggling toward the fence, which was only about 50 feet long and had a boar-sized hole at the bottom.

Tang gasped and jumped to the side, arcing wide around the sidewalk.

“They’re too close,” Tang said. “They should move back up the mountain.”

The boars seemed to be getting bolder every day, at times wandering into the road.

It didn’t help that her husband occasionally fed them cheap apples from the supermarket. Tang was not happy about that.

“He treats the pigs better than he treats me!” she said.

Eel trafficking in EU called the ‘largest wildlife crime on Earth

AFP-JIJI

Nov 21, 2018

PARIS – Billions of euros worth of critically endangered eels are being trafficked each year from Europe, ending up on tables in China and Japan in what campaigners say is “the largest wildlife crime on Earth.”

Stocks of European eel (anguilla anguilla) have plummeted 90 percent in three decades as mankind has developed the wetlands and dammed the rivers it needs to grow and feed in, and experts fear criminal gangs smuggling the lucrative fish are pushing it toward oblivion.

Despite growing alarm from conservationists, hundreds of tons of eels are still legally and illegally fished each year. In France — which catches more of the fish than any other EU state — the issue has taken on political dimensions.

“There’s around 10 percent of stocks left compared to 30 years ago due to habitat loss and what we’ve done to the migration pathways in Europe,” Andrew Kerr, chairman of the Sustainable Eel Group (SEG) that works to conserve the species, told AFP.

The eel’s vertiginous decline has provoked some action from governments and law enforcement agencies. It is now listed in the CITES international convention on trade in endangered species, resulting in strict national catch quotas.

The problem, according to Michel Vignaud, head of fishing regulation at France’s National Biodiversity Agency, is exploding Asian demand for a product viewed as both a delicacy and an aphrodisiac.

“We cannot legally export eels outside the EU, but the prices are different in Asia. There is a real Asian demand for eel,” he told AFP.

The U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organization said that in 2016 China produced close to a quarter of a million tons of eel for consumption, far ahead of Japan — where eating eel is seen as bringing good luck and fertility — and the EU.

The bloc’s law enforcement agency EUROPOL estimates as many as 100 tons of baby eels — known as glass eels for their translucent skin — are trafficked abroad each year: equivalent to around 350 million fish.

“Glass eels trafficking involves environmental crime, smuggling, document fraud, tax evasion and money laundering,” a spokesman told AFP.

The live eels are largely caught — legally or otherwise — in Western Europe before being smuggled eastwards in vans or lorries, often falsely labeled as nonendangered fish, police and conservationists say.

Criminal gangs then divide the eels into suitcases, up to 50,000 of the tiny fish per bag, which are then flown by commercial airliner to Asia.

The fish are grown in special farms to their full size — up to a meter and a half — and then sold to market for the equivalent of 10 euros each.

“Prices vary so you can only come up with bracket figures, but we’re talking billions (of euros). It’s the biggest wildlife crime by value on Earth,” said Kerr. “It’s the most trafficked and traveled animal on the planet.”

The European eel’s extraordinary life-cycle begins in the topaz waters of the Sargasso Sea. The eggs drift on the current across the Atlantic, often taking up to two years to reach the feeding grounds of Europe.

The baby eels swim up rivers where they live for up to 25 years, feeding on larvae and worms until fully grown before embarking on the 4,000-mile
(6,500-km) journey back home to the Caribbean, where they breed and finally die.

But they are under threat from a host of man-made dangers, including illegal fishing, pollution, and the estimated 1.3 million river barriers blocking their path across Europe.

“Our hope is that any eels still alive are left alone by humans,” said Charlotte Nithart, head of the Robin des Bois conservation group.

She said that France’s current legal eel quota — 60 tons per year, of which 60 percent must go to restocking efforts — was contributing to the species’ decline.

“We have never said that trafficking alone is responsible for the disappearance of eels,” she said.

“We want to cancel or at least dramatically reduce fishing quotas and reinforce the means to fight trafficking.”

For Guillaume de Preillec, who represents the local fishing committee in Brittany, quotas are “justified” for those whose livelihoods depend on the eel fishing season, which began across France last week.

“If you are in commercial fishing people tell you that when you fish more you earn more. So the fishermen always want more,” he said.

As the numbers of fish arriving on Europe’s shores goes down, smugglers are taking greater risks to sate voracious Asian demand.

“Trying to control the traffickers is getting more dangerous. These are people who operate on the sidelines of mass organized crime,” said Vignaud.

EUROPOL has scored a number of major hauls in recent years, including Spanish police busting an eel-smuggling gang in possession of 350 kg of glass eels in April.

But despite such seizures and a handful of ongoing trials, campaigners say the penalties remain flimsy compared with those for other trafficking crimes.

“EUROPOL can act on the level of customs but there’s not a European intervention force to fight trafficking and traffickers,” said Nithart.

Eels are mentioned in England’s 11th-century Domesday Book and used to be an accepted tax payment in medieval times.

But as mass trafficking continues to undermine EU-wide

efforts to save the threatened species, there are fears for the future of one of the world’s most storied fish.

“One of the sad things about today in general is how human beings are losing touch with nature, and the eel really symbolizes this,” said Kerr.

https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2018/11/21/world/crime-legal-world/eel-trafficking-eu-called-largest-wildlife-crime-earth/