Thailand has seized more than 300 kilogrammes of ivory from Malawi on flights into Bangkok's main airport, authorities announced today, underscoring the country's continued role as a regional smuggling hub.
The latest haul of some 422 pieces of elephant tusks highlights the extensive international links boasted by wildlife gangs.
Packages stuffed with ivory, together weighing 330 kilogrammes, were discovered on two Ethiopian Airline flights from Addis Ababa, the customs department said in a statement, adding that the parcels had originated in Malawi's capital Lilongwe.
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The international trade in ivory, with rare exceptions, has been outlawed since the late 1980s after a precipitous decline in the population of African elephants.
But that has not stopped criminal gangs seeking to exploit the continued demand for the material in Asia.
Tusks and other body parts of elephants are prized for decoration as talismans and for use in traditional medicine across parts of Asia -- despite a lack of any peer reviewed proof it works -- with China being a major market for such products.
Thailand's junta, which seized power in 2014, have vowed to crack down on the trade.
In 2015 Thailand incinerated more than two tonnes of confiscated ivory, the first time the kingdom has taken steps to destroy part of its stockpile.
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