Singapore jails South African for smuggling rhino horns

26 Jan 2024 • 5:08 PM MYT
Daily Express
Daily Express

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SINGAPORE: A Singapore court sentenced a South African man to two years in jail today for smuggling rhino horns, the heaviest sentence ever handed down in the city-state for smuggling wildlife parts.

Gumede Sthembiso Joel was arrested at Singapore’s Changi airport in 2022 after authorities found 20 rhino horns weighing 34.7 kilogrammes in his bags.

Sniffer dogs detected the contraband in his baggage while he was traveling from South Africa to Laos through Singapore.

They were worth about S$1.2 million (RM4.2 million) — the city-state’s largest seizure of rhino horn.

SPONSORED CONTENT Mengalum for world’s first net ­zero carbon island resort Taiwan’s Sinyi Group is on track to unveil the world’s first unique net zero carbon island resort on Mengalum Island. . Read more The 33-year-old was handed the sentence after pleading guilty to two charges of transiting with rhino horns without a valid permit.

“This is the heaviest sentence meted out in Singapore to date for a case involving the smuggling of wildlife parts,” Singapore’s National Parks Board (NParks) said in a statement today.

After undergoing forensic analysis, 18 horns were determined to be from 15 different white rhinos, while another two horns were from a single black rhino, NParks said.

Rhinos are protected under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) and international trade in their horns is prohibited.

Home to nearly 80 per cent of the world’s rhinoceroses, South Africa is a poaching hotspot, driven by demand from Asia.

The government said 448 of the rare animals were killed across the country in 2022, only three fewer than in 2021 despite increased protection at national parks.

Rhino horns are considered status symbols and believed to have medicinal properties in parts of Asia. They are also carved into jewellery and household items including combs, buttons and belt buckles.

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