Cambodia seizes shipment of ivory hidden in hollow logs

Cambodian authorities hold pieces of ivory after a shipment was seized in Preah Sihanouk province. Cambodia has seized nearly a ton of ivory hidden in hollowed-out logs and discovered inside an abandoned shipping container, an official said on Wednesday. (AFP)
Updated 06 December 2017
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Cambodia seizes shipment of ivory hidden in hollow logs

PHNOM PENH: Cambodia has seized nearly a ton of ivory hidden in hollowed-out logs and discovered inside an abandoned shipping container, an official said Wednesday.
The country has become a key regional transit point for the illicit wildlife trade.
Nearly 280 pieces of ivory — full and partial elephant tusks — were found in the container at the southwestern port of Sihanoukville after sitting there for a year.
The shipment, owned by a company based in Mozambique, left Ivory Coast and arrived in Cambodia in December 2016, an official said.
“When the containers arrived at the port we found strange objects in the scanners,” said Lim Bun Heng, deputy prosecutor for Preah Sihanouk province.
“We requested the company owner to open the containers but no one showed up,” he said, adding that eventually authorities seized the shipment.
An inspection uncovered the ivory, some of it hidden in logs.
Cambodia’s elephant population is small but demand for ivory in China and Vietnam — — and in the smaller domestic market— has made it a hub in recent years for the banned trade in wildlife parts.
Corruptible officials and weak law enforcement are an attractive mix for wildlife smugglers, more so as neighboring Thailand tries to improve its reputation as the regional center for the trade in endangered species.
Ivory is prized for its beauty while demand for traditional medicine has led to the smuggling of rhino horn and pangolin scales.
Chinese demand has driven a decade-long rise in elephant poaching, especially in Africa. China has pledged to phase out ivory sales by the end of the year.
In December last year Cambodian authorities found 1.5 tons of mostly ivory and pangolin parts in containers on the outskirts of the capital Phnom Penh, also originating from Mozambique.
Local media reported earlier this year that the government had decided to keep ivory stockpiles instead of destroying them, sparking criticism from conservation groups.


Swiss bar owner faces prosecutors for second hearing after deadly New Year’s fire

Updated 5 sec ago
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Swiss bar owner faces prosecutors for second hearing after deadly New Year’s fire

The French couple, Jacques and Jessica Moretti, are suspected of crimes including negligent homicide
They have both voiced ⁠grief over the fire, which mostly killed teenagers

GENEVA: The owner of a Swiss bar that caught fire on New Year’s Day, killing 40 people, appeared before prosecutors on Tuesday for a second set of hearings in the criminal investigation, according to a lawyer present.
The French couple, Jacques and Jessica Moretti, are suspected of crimes including negligent homicide.
Jacques Moretti, who is currently in police custody, is before prosecutors ⁠on Tuesday in Sion to examine his version of events, Romain Jordan, a lawyer for families of the victims, told Reuters.
Moretti’s wife, who remains free, is due to be heard on Wednesday.
They have both voiced ⁠grief over the fire, which mostly killed teenagers, and said they would cooperate with the probe.
During initial hearings, Jacques Moretti said that a service door at the back of the “Le Constellation” bar was locked shut during the blaze, according to excerpts published by Swiss media.
He said he forced it open from the outside and ⁠found several people lying behind it.
Asked about this testimony, his lawyer Nicola Meier said it was a tragedy but denied it represented a locked emergency exit.
Local authorities for the ski town of Crans-Montana also face scrutiny after missing safety checks. The mayor’s office said it withdrew a request to be a party to the case “out of respect for the victims.”