Singapore destroys eight tons of ivory worth about $10 mln

Singapore destroys eight tons of ivory worth about $10 mln

PanARMENIAN.Net - Singapore on Monday, June 13 crushed and burnt almost eight tons of ivory confiscated over two years to try to deter smugglers as activists called for tighter enforcement, AFP reports.

Over 2,700 elephant tusks weighing 7.9 tons were fed into an industrial rock crusher before incineration.

It was the first time seized ivory had been destroyed in Singapore, the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority said in a statement. Previous hauls were returned to the originating country, donated to museums or kept for education.

The tusks, estimated to be worth Sg$13 million ($9.6 million), were seized on four separate occasions between January 2014 and December 2015. In May 2015 some 2,000 tusks were found hidden in a shipment of tea leaves from Kenya, AFP says.

"The public destruction of ivory sends a strong message that Singapore condemns illegal wildlife trade. By crushing the ivory, we ensure it does not re-enter the ivory market," said Desmond Lee, a senior minister of state in the interior and national development ministry.

Singapore can do more to enforce strict anti-trafficking laws, said WWF-Singapore communications director Kim Stengert.

"There are illegal wildlife shipments caught in other ports after they came through Singapore. So we definitely need to step up efforts to enforce the strict rules," he said, according to AFP.

The ivory trade has been banned since 1989 by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, of which Singapore is a signatory.

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