HONG KONG: Hong Kong customs officers have seized 113 ivory tusks worth nearly $400,000 on the Chinese ivory market, officials said yesterday.
The smuggled ivory was seized at the airport on Tuesday in a container marked “spare parts” from Burundi which was bound for Singapore, said an official statement.
The total seizure, weighing 300 kilograms (660 pounds), was worth an estimated HK$3m ($390,000).
“Upon X-ray image analysis, the consignment was detected to contain ivory tusks instead of spare parts,” the statement said.
Customs officers made the city’s largest ivory seizure last October when they intercepted almost four tonnes worth about $3.4m, hidden in shipments from Kenya and Tanzania.
In January, customs officers intercepted another container from Kenya carrying 779 pieces of ivory tusk weighing 1.3 tonnes.
Anyone found guilty of importing ivory into Hong Kong faces up to two years in jail and a maximum HK$5m fine.
AFP