Naijalog
  • Home
  • News
    • Top Stories
    • World News
  • Trending
  • Entertainment
    • Cinemas
    • Interviews
    • Events
    • Music
    • Videos
  • Sports
    • Football
      • Premiership
      • NPL
    • WORLD CUP 2018
  • Lifestyle
    • Nutrition
    • Health
    • Sex and Relationships
  • Quizzes
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Top Stories
    • World News
  • Trending
  • Entertainment
    • Cinemas
    • Interviews
    • Events
    • Music
    • Videos
  • Sports
    • Football
      • Premiership
      • NPL
    • WORLD CUP 2018
  • Lifestyle
    • Nutrition
    • Health
    • Sex and Relationships
  • Quizzes
No Result
View All Result
Naijalog
No Result
View All Result

AFRICA’S IVORY SMUGGLING TRADE KINGPIN ARRESTED

naijalog by naijalog
August 9, 2013
in Entertainment
Reading Time: 2 mins read
0
0
SHARES
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Whatsapp

A suspected Togolese ivory smuggler, Emile Edouwodzi N’bouke, has been arrested in the capital, Lome.

He was detained after 700kg (1543lb) of ivory was found at his shop by an anti-trafficking squad, the BBC reports.

The BBC’s Blame Ekoue says Mr N’bouke, known as “The Boss” in Lome, is considered by security agents to be a “kingpin” in Togo’s ivory trade.

RelatedArticles

Missile Strike Hits U.S. Embassy in Baghdad Amid Rising Regional Tensions

Diddy Appeals 50-Month Prison Sentence, Calls Punishment Excessive

But Mr N’bouke denied any involvement in exporting illegal ivory and said he dealt in bone ornaments.

Our reporter says Togo has recently become a transit point for ivory dealers, who have begun to use Lome’s harbour after finding access to other West African ports
difficult.

Akoumassou Totchikpa, the head of Togo’s Forestry and Fauna Commission, says most of the trafficked ivory comes from the West African sub-region, including Benin,
Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Ghana and Ivory Coast.

In July, customs officials in Hong Kong seized more than two tonnes of elephant tusks worth $2.2m (£1.6m) hidden in cargo from Togo.

They said it was their largest seizure since 2010, and was likely to have come from baby elephants.

Togo has only 60 elephants living in protected national parks, our reporter says.

Togo’s Environment Minister Dede Ahoefa Ekoue said the arrest of Mr N’bouke proved the country was taking the problem of ivory trafficking seriously.

“I am proud… that Togo is showing the world that… we are going to continue this fight against the dealers who are destroying our natural resources,” she told the
BBC’s Focus on Africa programme.

The anti-trafficking squad seized five or size tusks from Mr N’bouke’s shop where he sold other ornaments made from animal bones.

Col Yao Kondi, head of the squad, said Mr N’bouke was a “kingpin” in the ivory trade and the unit’s investigations would continue into its trafficking.

After his arrest on Tuesday night, some journalists were allowed to question Mr N’bouke, 58, at the headquarters of the anti-trafficking squad.

He said that his main clients were in China, and he had imported ivory with permits from Chad since 1983, when it was legal to do so.

ShareTweetSend

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

  • Contact us
  • Advertise with us

© 2022 Naijalog

No Result
View All Result
  • Entertainment
  • Top Stories
  • Trending
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle

© 2022 Naijalog