| Delhi
police seize 26.4 kg of ivory products
New
Delhi, April 27, 2001: On April 26, the Delhi
Police seized 26.4 kg of ivory products and jewellery
worth Rs 2.6 million from two men, indicating the high
demand for ivory despite the fact that the trade in
Asian ivory was banned in 1986 and that in African ivory
in 1991. Acting on a tip, police used a decoy customer
who struck a deal for the delivery of 20 kg of ivory
goods at Rs 30,000 per kg, and arrested a man named
Ashkar for violating the Wildlife (Protection) Act of
India, 1972.
"The
ivory goods that have been seized consist of old ivory
carvings," says WTI Trustee Ashok Kumar. "However,
some of the goods, like bangles, look fairly new, which
just goes to show that there is still clandestine illegal
carving that continues in Delhi today."
Ashkar, from whom 18.95 kg of ivory goods was seized,
revealed the whereabouts of his accomplice Mohammed
Yunus, who had concealed a cache of ivory products weighing
7.45 kg at his home. According to the police, the arrested
men dealt in ivory and had hoarded a good deal of it
in the hope of earning a massive profit. Police officers
however believe that the two were merely middlemen,
and a larger, organised gang could be involved.
Mr
Kumar says "nearly 10-12 tuskers have died since
December onwards in the Rajaji-Corbett belt. Currently,
figures show that there are less that 1,200 breeding
tuskers in the country." Could the seized goods
have come from the tuskers that were recently killed
by poachers in the Corbett National Park?
Mr
Kumar says the ivory from those tuskers is too new to
have already reached the carvers, but there is no doubt
that the tusks are concealed somewhere and will be smuggled
out soon, either as tusks or as carvings. The largest
consumers of Asian ivory, Mr Kumar says, are the Japanese,
who use them make signature seals called 'hanko', rather
than make rubber seals. Disturbingly, Mr Kumar says,
"China is another country that is becoming a major
user of Asian ivory."
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