Vietnam gives longest ever jail term for trading rhino horn: NGO
Last updated on: 08 December,2021 03:46 pm
Vietnam gives longest ever jail term for trading rhino horn: NGO
HANOI (AFP) - A rhino horn trader has been sentenced to 14 years in jail, the longest ever prison term a Vietnamese court has handed down for the crime, a local conservation group said Wednesday.
Vietnam is both a consumption hub and popular transit point for the multibillion-dollar trade in animal parts.
Authorities have long vowed to stem the flow of illegal wildlife criss-crossing its borders, but experts have warned the black market persists thanks to weak law enforcement.
Earlier this week, Do Minh Toan, 36, received 14 years in jail for trading and trafficking rhino horns from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) into Vietnam.
It came after a 2019 discovery by customs officials at Hanoi’s Noi Bai international airport of 55 pieces of rhino horn -- weighing around 125 kilogrammes (275 pounds) -- in a carefully disguised shipment.
The pieces were encased in plaster and police used rods to break the casts apart.
According to non-government organisation Education for Nature Vietnam (ENV), the punishment is the toughest to date in the country for crimes relating to rhino horns and the wildlife trade.
"Amid the negative opinions about Vietnam’s handling of wildlife crimes, this heavy penalty showed that Vietnam’s competent authorities have begun to mete out serious punishment to deter people from wildlife crimes," ENV vice director Bui Thi Ha said in a statement.
The organisation said Vietnam had recorded 317 crimes relating to rhino horns since 2017. A total of 24 people have been arrested and charged, with the average jail term for those found guilty more than five years.
Vietnam and China remain lucrative markets for elephant tusks, pangolins, tiger parts and rhino horns.
Some believe that rhino horn helps cure diseases and hangovers when ground into powder.
Poachers in Africa have decimated wild rhino populations to meet demand despite the trade being banned globally since the 1970s.
Only about 29,000 rhinos survive in the wild, down from half a million at the beginning of the 20th century, according to conservationists.