Largest seizure of Critically Endangered Ploughshare Tortoises made in Thailand

Press Release - TRAFFIC in Enforcement
P.Tansom/TRAFFICBangkok, Thailand, 19 March 2013 – Just a day after the
close a global wildlife trade conference here, authorities at Suvarnabhumi
International Airport made two big seizures, discovering hundreds of
threatened tortoises and apprehending two smugglers. Among the tortoises
seized were some of the rarest in the world. 

On Friday, authorities arrested a 38-year-old Thai man as he was attempting
to collect a bag containing tortoises from Madagascar, from a luggage
carousel, at the airport. The bag was registered to a 25-year-old woman who
had flown from Madagascar to Bangkok via Nairobi the same day.
Royal Thai Customs officers and their counterparts in the CITES management
authority found 54 Ploughshare Tortoises Astrochelys yniphora and 21
Radiated Tortoises Astrochelys radiata, both of which are assessed as being
Critically Endangered.

Ploughshare and Radiated Tortoises are endemic to Madagascar, totally
protected in the country and are both listed in CITES Appendix I. The wild
population of Ploughshare Tortoises, considered among the rarest species in
the world, is estimated to be as few as 400 individuals, and is declining fast.

The Malagasy woman was also arrested, said Dr Theerapat Prayurasiddhi,
Deputy Director of Thailand’s Department of National Parks, Wildlife and
Plant Conservation at a press conference on Friday.

Theerapat told press that the Thai man caught picking up the bag had been
arrested earlier this year on another wildlife smuggling charge. He also
expressed concern that the man had been able to access the baggage
collection area despite not being a passenger and believed that he must have
been aided by several other people who were part of this smuggling attempt.
He said this aspect would be thoroughly investigated.

Both the Thai man and the Malagasy woman are expected to face charges under
Thai law.

Earlier the same day, CITES officers found 300 Indian Star Tortoises
Geochelone elegans (CITES Appendix II) and 10 Black Pond Turtles Geoclemys
hamiltonii (CITES Appendix I) when they inspected an unclaimed bag on a
carousel in the airport at 8.40 a.m. The Indian Star Tortoise is heavily
traded as an exotic pet despite being legally protected in range
countries—India, Sri Lanka and Pakistan. All three have banned commercial
export of the species under national legislation, making shipments from
these countries illegal anywhere in the world.

Over the past few years, authorities in this airport have made dozens of
seizures of Indian Star Tortoises; most of which were found in the luggage
of passengers flying into the country. In the last three years alone
(2010–2012), Thai authorities have seized more than 4300 tortoises and
freshwater turtles, 50% of which were Indian Star Tortoises. Authorities in
India have similarly intercepted numerous smuggling attempts of Indian Star
Tortoises to Thailand.

At the recently concluded meeting of the Conference of the Parties of the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and
Flora (CITES), delegates from Thailand and Madagascar discussed plans to
share intelligence and co-operate in other ways to curb the smuggling of
wildlife from Madagascar to Thailand, Theerapat noted during the press
conference.

He said the discussion included the plan for a Memorandum of Understanding
between the two countries to enhance communication between counterparts,
jointly raising the profile of the issue in government and within the
broader public, carrying out joint investigations and working towards the
repatriation of seized animals.

“TRAFFIC congratulates the Thai authorities for these very significant
seizures” says Dr Chris R. Shepherd, Deputy Director of TRAFFIC in Southeast
Asia. “The criminals behind this shipment of Ploughshare Tortoises have
effectively stolen over 10% of the estimated population in the wild. They
should not be allowed to get away with it. They should face the full force
of the law.” “We urge authorities to go after the criminal masterminds
behind these shipments and break the trade chains that threaten these
incredibly rare animals”, he said.

Press contact: Elizabeth John, Senior Communications Officer (Southeast
Asia), TRAFFIC [email protected], +6012 2079790 (M)

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